HESS HE GARDENERS CHRONICLE “PUBLISHED FOR THE PRO 4 coe ‘ ‘ ha ae é tt anes gia ed AST gh my rats ub aetg aaa es Ra tes INDEX OF CONTENTS ) 2 2 THE VOLUME FOR 1841. kinds to work on the common, 659; torenovate an old, 647; | Boston (Massachusetts) Botanic Garden, 70; remarks on the cli- - A. Ash, 's Gardener’: Jenrnal, ody root with an an inscription, mountain, mate and plants at, 344; weather at, 431 2 pele ets me 7 Botanical jabels for the herbarium, series of, adv., 114; rev.,135 Abies seersnor described, 662 a forest, gf a Doa- | 4 sia Minor. its vegetation, 263 Botanical lectures in 1635, 471 glasii, at Coul, 36; rate of poh Tyree Kutrow, 38; Morinda, tain Society; Prone Bee i i, 93 Botanical Register, adv., 16; criticism on, keatiion triatum, its propagation, 213; vitifoliam, hard: | Asparagus at Abergele, 329; tu caltivation, of, 600; to force, 121; | Botanist, adv., 18 Po at Abyssinia, its climate, 647 dopey erie Se frames, Bowond, chase ct hemes Acacia arabica, 23; biflora, 118; Bape ache 230; yd se ‘= ty neon nde paciiecorwe ran ot ah Bachyeome iberiiflin, 181 $ “soma 133; adv., 193 at Mr. Leaf’s, 119; seourmen tic, 0 seep 5 89; cee = eager Bran as a substitute for manure, = 1 nting in a conservatory, 121 ; leaves used for cattle, 438 cae reenen » ered Brecsicaces mecans, 215 canthostachys strobilacea, 1 rassia caine oF Acarus, to destroy, 265 rac ot 71,118 wiih i a ibed, 450; fi ticed, ¢ 3 Acclimatisin ce SOT he SEP b in India, 439 ; Be dll ex: ‘what composed, 115 5 ist, 147, 198 ead Sane bee senpiek cheats, 486: pereanporgosinneet 8 periments on, 420 5 Femarks om, MP 348; ye japonica, adv., Denni 745 Helen: 6 omey hy airmen double yellow and blush noticed, Acid, wan eee i, Pei load = A Lodge, | B a upeharemeen im « baw 5; 5 e, rit ro s| 6 Me iis me) ames inde properties es ee acs on sat ‘ie tec, a *cuitivation, 998, 7375 pro- "find fra gottage par ake oe Parnes, 932; be pus Siete Pvatc ‘ad | Beis ot 228 construction of, uecession of, 297 ; transplan = 00 ; its preservation in win- Herifes Brooke 518 Azaleas, adv., Low and Co., p= Ansell, 609; Youell, 361: ter 672; remedy (Siete club emg 7175 Cape, its improvement, roreabinitsg its cultivation, 537, 849; grandiflorus, 54, 598 ; double maf e47; ‘white, 342; Mew yarbition 261; treatment ; Knight's protecting, 103 di Rape described, 247, " macula proc Bem ne ag at Rollisson’s, 119 of ereenhvose, 708 Bromeliacem, Tepes cultivated, 133 gapani s, hardy, F sorati, " Broughton notes on, 504 Agave americana, MA, 497; soil for, 688 Ayres’ Cultivation of Cucumber, adv., 16; reviewed, 243 sehte : _ Agricultural works for emigrants, 683 ¢ Bruchus pisi and granarius, remedy for, 297 Agriculture, ‘soplications of science 831; connexion between B. heir treatment, 137, 313 eo oagonyy a ae «2585 § Ot procears > Baines’s Flora of Yorkshire, reviewed, 56 fvbacontbe gman og | etme 429 ndia, manazement, oi » Air, defined, 100 ; furnishes plants with carbon, 23 Balsam seed, adv., 7 Appelits and Biche 713 ; soil for, 473 Seana Pane en sowing, 329 Albumen described, 412 Banbury Nursery, ad moneg knife, adv. ; Lemon, 2 Ale, spoiled, a manure, 417 Banyan-tree described, py how perfc ormed, 451; aa s method, 533; , a Alge, to dry, 569 Barchard, Mr., ped tha Sige ne pry vere better than worsted for, Gay ; its effects, 307 Alkalies, the perfect development of a plant dependent on, 119 | Barentin’s Vegetation in the March of Brandenburg, a » 107 | suds, development of adventitious, 685 Allcard, Mr. his garden noticed, 119, 599 Bark, its average price for 10 years, 19; price of oak, mon0- | Bulbs, adv., Marnock and Manley, 699; Pairigeanivasd manne Allen 06 2 noticed, 200 poly, 85, 293, 343 41; Warner, 657; Carter, 657; Cape, their Allnut, he garden noticed, 400 Bayley, blue, $4 verietien Reece 3 735; disease in, 454 417; season loguttprcet, 89; “soil for, 616; Aloe, a new hybrid, 183; the American at Abergele, 197 Barometz, its vation, 567 51; formed on leaves, 414 sofa ee ey ee po ao eat siatee: : case ungus Alstroemeria acntifolia, hardy, ies N Néillii, 413 ; raised from seed, | Bateman’s Orchidacex - 0 705 Ras yrepee mala, a4 lingtonia at Broughton Hall, 583; rigida, 151 151, 353 ; to grow, 121; soil for, ”639 Bauer’ male noticed, pe. 2 ‘raacis, his biography, ‘ge sie frondosa, ibed, 23 Alumine, described, 340 Ba. ay tres, , resuscitated, 531, 565, 597, Bie 0B y Fie OP 5 OER Butera, Prince, notice of his death, 631 Alum, its use in bread, 486 a eons we 553 an Butter, bad, 486; to make good, 590; its preservation, 433 ‘Amaryllis, a spre Belladonna, its cultivation, 201; Bean, to sow, 151, 259; gassing of, 103; kidney, how used, | Butter-dew described, 700 its treatment, 601; management of, 629 ; 612; cranberry, its excellence, 765; Scarlet runner, its cultiva- aga tion, 276; Marshall’s early prolific, adv., 33; kinds for a cottage oe * Amber, 519 garden, $4 Cabbage, to plant, 380, BR ot a dibber, 2175 eettcie: pea, ts, a ep Bea effects of ft 199 kinds of, 103; raf SB maces ha, sei tee ite att ey scone, a eonical pronestons Od cure for club in, 41, 165, ‘club, 629; eaterpillar Ammonia, described 292 ; the eamdsigse 12; its effects, 488 ; how Beech, af Know!s; its Atmenslant. 193 ; Fern-leaved, to keep true, ul fe vegetation, 00 formed, 196 ; 3 how supplied to plants, 7, 119; exists in’ every part ote. ads. Neighbour. 2 ag 783 Cacti, adv., Charlwood, 481: their cultivation, 135; to raise seed- Auchoee eapeui vk Wk a 309; petiolata, heey of the 180s contuty, 5 "ling, 413 to graft, 547; flue too warm for, 689; imported for known, © au hardy, pigs be Bees, their management, ee 133, 164, 228, 233, 292, 431, 452, 469, | sale, 535; Palmer's collection noticed, 71, 328 Anemones » Groom, 17; Sclaterand Son, 409; Sutton and | 516, 705,716,764; Persian Modeof managing, entice | Caen Caen Wood, — aca ae cau a Son, Son, 873 sogee © 681. Origin of garden varieties, 265; their winter, 785 pres [ante me wate Tas ee Sine 776; aeameone. ” pe a es pene ih bream shay Libegse < ah " hardy, 441; not hardy, $ bilobum other, 281; to join two hives, 734; their hive, 102;| 785, 844; properties of, 844; ‘ soem lobo ue in the soil, 51 dead under time trees, 7 Cat holes in lower, «7; armen, eenaied ; difference between shrubby und herbaceous F Anaasis, beet old, old, Pig Pe t showy hardy, ae new green. 519 ; advantage w hives, ; Cal : erg se, 134; most sho autamn-sowing, is a Bees, humble, described, 485; injure flowers, 533, 550, 597; not ectasia -antumn-blooming, tee) Cae, e en thie: bane for injurious to beans, 517 ‘i Calico, varnished, subtitate gr a _ Antarctic expedition, news of, 215, 551 Beet, Anthyllis erinaeea, > 309° red oS eee . vermis mixtu : 37,55 _ Antrobus, Sir E., his noticed, 87 ___ Ants, their destruction, 25, 37, 329, removed by fuunamiseled a Aotus te 8 Oy 77 anor, 8,297,989 “400, a ae , 782, 827 Aphis lanigera, its remag tion, = its. —~ . ; deri, 151. pany [Sep 396, not quite hardy, 685 remarks | Candahar fruits, 767 Canker in medicinal properties, 70 St. James’s Park, 211; frightened by worsted.. Carbon, its an St James's Park, 2115 their utility in gardens, INDEX. iv : Catasetum laminatum, 6 ; trulla, 41 Crocuses at Barton, 183; Ch 1 1 p- | Fennel, sweet, described, 199 Caterpillar, to destroy, 132; apricot bad destroyed, 281 plied to, 327 be British, ‘remarks oe 636; their geographical di distribution, Catleugh’s Pelargoniums noticed, 36; ‘roggon’s patent protecting material, adv.,/337 ; their eats m, 519; to raise from are Raid their im. Cattle, to prevent their biting trees, eso Croome, description of, 687 jevguat hel = oo when exclude ut oir, ie Cattleyas, treatment, 416, 832; must not cover their roots | Crown lands, 149 kinds for 769; trees in New Zena with moss, 137 Croxteth Hall, noticed, 631 Tasmannia, 21 Cauliflower, cultivation of, 85; to obtain a succession, 297; the | Cuckoo, destructive to small birds, 489 ; food of, 585 ‘estuca loliacea attacked by Aphides, 593 clite® Asiatic, 109 cure fingers and toes in, 601, 613 Cucumber, adv., Cuthill, 21: Flanagan and Nutting, 49; Brittan, | Ferrarias, their pre » 769 Cawdor, woods at, 719 681 ; Warmer, 809; cultiv ation of, 229, 341 ; of winter and spring, Pleas indica described, 23, 412 gress pene Se Thaja cupressoides, 367; of Lebanon, treat- 35; on hothouse, or in cottage gardens, 308; soil for, 633; | Fig, treatment of, 633; reason of the fruit falling in forcing, 203 - en #1, 329; soil for, ; history of, 765; uses of, good kinds of, 121, 737; Allen’s 's Victory of Suffolk described, _hardiest kind, 369 ; kinds for the north, 79 ‘ 733, 200; viviparous, 564; cautions against advertisers, 781 ; Filbert, its management, 51; grafted, 69; ue of grafted, 731 Celery, ady., Lane, 113; Cuthill, 751: to plant out, 324,412; to| marks on advertisements, 814, 846; es, — by Watts, 273; | | Filters for cottagers, 412 ‘ earth up, 639, 781; good varieties of, 103 ; fora cottage garden, pits described, 35, 150, 596; co! f, 73; th ers for | Finnochio, its cultivation a" . 84; Seymour's eg Br ne 781; fly described, 660 linings of, 486; Ayres on, adv., s 16; rey., ms, Smith o: Lady y., | Fir, management of seeds, 5 3 to ‘Oo remove large, 801; in North Centaurea 34; Duncan on, ady., 114 Britain, 36; relative wales ee silver and larch, 197; effect of Gallipeden, tnintntus, ¢ Cultivation i in high pape 87 nitrate of soda on, 749 ; Scotch, adv., Jansen and F Finney, $25 Ceratonia siliqua, the wild locust of Scripture, 2 pores expansa, its revival, 701 ; thurifera, its rapid growth, | Flax, Indian, 750; its growth in Ireland, 294 Floral Calendar and Garden Almanac, adv., 730 Cereus grandifiorus, at Rendle’s Nursery, pan ‘diese treat- ment of, ate fe ape eer treatment of, 505; Wortleyanus | Curratt, Corsten, Denni 809; yoga, Flora’s World, or the Flower Gardener’s Library, reviewed, 600 me of por ing pyle re in ry weather, 429: to Lary Almanac advertised, 1 4 prea gren its cultivation, 246 25 ce large bunches, 329; to prevent thro ea sist Bowers, rules for judging, 430 for seedlings, s45 Cetonia aurata described, 452 suckers, 21, 53, 102; for a cottage. yee 69; yd e North, Florist 's Jou! pater bat 5 Ceylon, its botany, 431; moss, its value, 232 769 ; Knight’s sweet red, 817; the woolly-leav ue, 365 ; | Flower-gar ment of colours for, in June, 327; in July, Chalk, its decomposition, 117 caterpillars, their destruction, 73, 292; insect: Seocaibed 515, | 367; = Tants ‘for, 7, 6334 to eee 483 Chandler’s Nursery, Camellias at, 199; Chrysanthemums at, 6, 767 | 779; sawfly described, 543; sphinx described, 779 Flower-market at Paris, 4 Charcoal, for 537, 581; its effect on plants, 732; used in | Cuttings, to strike, 193, 137; to strike in water, 364, 397, 414, Flower- pots, remarks on, 499, 517, 549, 563, 597, 659, 793 propagation, 549; Lope use, 1 165 501; col ir striking, 200; results of singing | A bot- | Flowers, dressed fo: cikoeapeerager 612; for Pale 148; am. 103, Chatsworth oem f frost at, 55; notes on, 23: toms, 385 ; soil for, 585; selection for propagation, 411; state | 185, 349; to preserve cut, 153; to revive faded, 662 ; to pack, 3 its value in horticulture, 379; rural, 83, r propagation, - 467 ; make, 417; where w Hee * when 05 their connexion with manufactures, 100, 115, 131, a, 308, — ~ 244, 276, 291, 323, 340, "364, ade, 5: Flues constructed of slate, 342 > 379, 412, 452, 468 cyclamens their management, 217, 457 Forei, bi ical works, adv., 18, 7 p saeeny tae a mbidium pendulum, 134; seamed 455 —- - cgraed Hecape ar hd Cherry, its value as a tree, 647; to force, 291; to gather, Cynips scribed, 732; on roots, 648 reing plants, mn > best kinds of, 38,721, 8495-for 69; for aioe bo a ciiibear 198, 814 Forcing-pit at the Palace Gardens, Fulham, 215 . shire, 169; forthe north, 769; fora south wall, 137 5 for sue- | Cypress in the garden of Generalife, noticed, 22; of Montpelier, | Food of plants, remarks on, 245, 449 cessidn, 769; gop amare 769; Mr. Knight's described, 400 Forest-trees, adv., Parks, 697; Dickson management of, — 297; Bigarreau on a north wall, 781; Mayduke, mortality | Cyperus Papyrus, described, 700 163, 381, 413; remarks on bd anmernag 429, 661 ; on pruning and among, 37 ; apreonsy derivation, aa the Ostheim, Bona Cypripedium barbatum, 504; insigne, 633 lopping, 181, 182; 1, 213, 229, 341; advantage of Chesnut, ancient trees of, Spanish, 4 at Camberwell, 550 Cyrtochilum filipes, 400, 799 ; graminifolium, 783 root-praning, af Ris Chinampas of Mexico described, 295 Cyrtopodium Andersoni, its cultivation, 230 ; Fossil Flora of Great Britain, ady., 16 Chloride of lime to accelerate th tatir f , 150 Cytisus filipes, its history, 365 ; urnum, purple, 366 Franciscea latifolia, 799 " Chi maya on meat ne Serer: Sat, 342 5 — sere noticed, 343 Chorozema, its pronunciation, 689; spectabile, 617: in -41, jurious to Pears, 20; keeping ou! 6; rium, its treatment, 265 srry ica sect ai D. guard eae bi or effects of, ite % 1g adv., May, Chandler, Dacrydium, a new species, noticed Fruit, best kinds of, 38; how affected by the age of the tree, 381; y 2495 porte rege ae caeaane 367 ; “oppor pgreee a if Canlier, 1; Brown, 2 * Gill, 49; Mountjoy,81 ; Prothe- its formation prevented promotes flowers, 363; contin welion to raise from sy Soy to top, 489; best varieties and Morris, 113; Stewart, 129; Lowand Co. 162; Widnall, 177, carbonic acid, 417, 430; in kiln-dried straw, 816; to pack for of, 115, 785; ap ree ee 700s regarded as florists’ flowers, 115 625 ; Gaines, 93; Hedley, ee Ansell, 257; Brown carriage, 485; in the 15th century, ~ porate Chandler’s, 6, 767 ; | and Attwell, 257; Dod, 257 ; Jacl 257 ; Wi 273; Catleugh | Fruit-room described, 611, 643; remarks on, 685, 701, 733, 734 Chonk stove for a greenhouse, 98, 182, 632; for a pit, 41 ma Eee 289; Appleby an ae ;Spary,7!3;Lan- | Fruit-trees, adv., Denyer, 713; to ange 21; to remove, 648; their Chusan, isclimate, 167 its natural history, seeds from, Edward, 751; ck, 777 « Headland, 777: ; Whale, trestaient, S13 their management on walls, 737; to protect, Tea-trees.in, ig re | 809; Lockie 825; notes on, 19; principles. of caltheations 227; 845 ; to train, pet chssxindisin dg treatment of freab-atesicee ery when See 600; M mgr Se of pruning, 645; rate of growth, val potcga Barometz, in h frit at Birmingham, 551 . Bis of seen pO as > 1875 -Faas 7a 796; preservation of old, 93; effect of stock on cg Cicer arietinum as a substitute for coffee, 432 ¢ varieties, 38, 87, 44, 717, 753, 780 5 ite pronnnciation, 737 5 mg 3. , 849; limited age of varieties, 197; injured by being Cider, to rien bey 28 ie wsed in the 15th century, 948 mine produced from, 119; prize. Sens 7: to 0% dug "élose to, 385; di a Hen between Quenouille & Buisson Cinerar: 145; Ivery, 610; their management in | flowers, 165. 181 ; roots, treatment of, e guiirats Ts |, 705; kinds for pe sort! Wales: oh, remarks Daphne Lagetto, 150 — 629 ; to grotect fete hares, 41, 101; to kill insects _ Dandelions, to eradicate 28: ’ om, 408, 833 ; ;ppanpteition for, 85; Errington’s wash for, 25; Datura arborea, its treatment, 612, 661 ; to flower, 505 patent nets for, Daubentonia Tripetiana, adv., 529 - Fuchsia, adv., Standish, 2; roan een Daubeny’s Three Lectures on Agriculture, ady., 82; rev., 193 Smith, 289: Young, 366; Ansell, 609 Beri Meg , Sone ari Dawsonia polytrichoides, 199 ; Chandler, 693 ; anions Salter me An Wheeler, 809 : tomake (ep omemwg hese ta: pone i oye of, 536; Heseeyertems in: Winter, 108, De Candolle’s agetana Onalietiorest ty hae 17 ; 596; reason for fruit cal a 553; hardy at Aigburth, 644; at Deepdene, Camellias at the, 119; effects of winter at, 279 - Argan, 149; list of ornamental, 630, 633; its pronunciation, a ‘Agriculture, et la Condition des Aj en Irlande et 737, 831; arbo _for a. ervatory, 102; conica, at ‘ Grand Bretagne, : 536 ps Barton H: 99 ; cordifolia, 455, 832; corym| jora flowering Denirobitim aggregatom, at Ealing Park, 231; discolor, 279,687, | in the open air, 636 ; its t, 54, 549, 7 for winter yum, 6; treatment flowering, 247; fulgensa greenhouse plant, 137; its treatment, Decdar, a erers t described, 311; its introduction, 699, 731; its 398, 405 when to cut down, 217; its preservation in be amy th at Welbeck, 325; its treatment, 749, 781; rate of | 721; hybrids force well, 246; seed-vessels described, 633; as possag ag. 313 ; their use, 360 ; dust not injuri- mre, Saree Tisvumene: 215 ; tar, its natur 764; tar and slaked | an Coburgia a raise: a 585; tri- Goceus on Prames. ee to, tp 69. Cockroaches, their rdemtoction at, 136, 201, 245, 262, 205, 309 grow $30" Dibbling amet Dickson’s Digitalis, poss kind British, 68: nbtes on, 647 poash peewee teed rot described, at Uni of Te Lond: Duncan on the Cucumber, mice honeed, Boe. - Winkfield, ursery, foreing- isn, ta notes on, 383, 488 649 , Teviewed, 552 Fumaria, new Briti Galeandra Devoniana, Garden engines, a Gardens and gardenin Gardener, a gentleman’ rece an : , treatment a Pee x 846; Canigh, bee tena 16 4725 coronaria, 751 ; cristata, $11 ; Det the Shea Tn noted, a8 ; cies ox arnokes Coffee and Tea, their principles identical, 671 prizes for, $1 e, oe « Colchicum, its vital economy, 670° ; Park described, 5593 notice of, 719; plants at, 23; orchi- | Gardenia fiorida, its 3 tea daceous house at, 36 1 i Cold in his antndes, $8; to protect plants from, 103 Ear-cockles described, § ~~ ee 's botanical Collectors, Belgian, 1 Earth described, 323 ; 3 bread | Chinese, - Coloured siedin, oleetrienl, See Earwigs their history, 360; ty, Secnberie eimai Colours, complementary, explained, 369 ; principles of arrange- Echeveria Iurida, 6. ae many, Gas om © plants, 201 Shei contrast, Get; thelr har. cog e ee sh Hall, effects of the winter at, 247; vinery fall leaf planted in St. James’s Park, 395) In’ Kensington Gardens, cause-of t joss of leaves, 363, Roains see O78. my +5 578. ‘i ~ n , British, works on, 689, $17 meen adv., Ee a best winter 1 reliaten, tas. Tae . n, : oer ee th et eer tt = ona block of ; Euste} Euthal fla, P Evergreens, gis awn aE 708 ; to plant, a ee ental for 1841, reviewed, 7; for 1842, noticed, 734 | Gloriosa. osa superba, its cultiy Gloxinia rubra Saran nome eB 704, 813; ‘tor a wall Go, ormamenta, 5 noticed, 394, 615, 671 method of : é o eee cee ae ee ee. - at, 23, fruit-tree, 685, 733, 781; radicans at Birmingham, 599 ; Wor. maldii, its treatment, 685 ; YoueHii, reason for not he aes Fuel, for a greenhouse at night, 721 Dillwyn’s papers communicated to the Royal Institution of | Fulham Palace Gardens, fe peing- pit in, 215 ion, 385 Fumigation, how ervey X ied Fungi, edible, 132 ; in the human head, 703 Gaines’s Nursery, Fantomas oii 352 54 Galvanic protector, adv., Richardson, 242; Treggon, 249; ap-_ plied to pots, oo Segenretiet 115, 165; Saul’s, 247, 262 2 Garden of a eae residence, 518 advertise the wages they expect, 454; education. couragement fo: vation, 764 at. a 'S, 245; speciosa, its eer aes fruit, Grand pores tinea a $31. Grape, adv., Wilmot, 465; White, 713: 263 ; treatment of, 596; Venedted by eden 1351 ing, 568; conditions of setting, 259 Rumen 35, 's, defined, 369; overworked, 601; should = of, 454; en preparation of for the colonies, 339, 411; 9; wages of, 195, 262; duties of, 797; ; Situation for, 249. ; to fertilise, INDEX. v ng, 233; ripening hastened, by ringing, 749; to blue, 612; “to produce large'f li plants, 785; pre- | Loasa:lateritia, its: management, 181; Mr. H > 3 fetal well- satoarel, 133; to mature the bunches, sp ; servation in winter, Tr; 7 769.8 849; ¥, 798 : described, 598 BE erbert’s mule de a prevent from shrivelling, 73; preserv: ation of, gent eo eatin eo er heinea ade Lobelia ignea, its propagation, 617 tion of, 644; on coiling in pots, 749; obtained in pots, 3 ou rometer, ho 5 fevered 20 oc: Pico f plants S, Loddiges’ Nursery, notes on, 6, 55, 119, 247, 328, 488, 615, 800 utility of growing in pots, 830; cannot be grown with stove Dee er, de 9) jmavagement of,’311; how used, 431, | London, its atmosphere not noxious - lant, 499; oo plants, 617; 6dark, 672; fora cottage-garden, 132; Cannon-hall i register, natural, 644; a self- -acting, 380 ; Mason’ s, cause of smeaithiness, 515, 531; to er healthy, Moscat, treatment of, 309; Frontignan, 121 the Almeria, 23; iichat - bps _ fasten wall-trees, 80 the Poonah, 201; Wilmot’s Black Hamburgh described, 579; | Hylurgus piniperda cannot be eradicated, 601 Lor color, the structure of the pollen tubes, 182 from America, 732; from Candahar, 767; at Versailles, 229 Hypochzeris radicata a natural ype 644 pair Mae Arboretum bie ae Britannicum, adv., 18; Grass, adv., Soemeack, : z peixtare for pasture, 57 ; for Lawns, 169; 5 abridgment, adv., 794; review =| Encyclop: ar he when to man uction of bs in land, 705 4 . a2 culture, adv., 378; ee ‘¥clopz ng oe if ‘ottage, om, and Villa Cocksfoot, where cde sck Sh "601 ; Italian rye, its value, 327, 599; Tee, on its preservation 817 Architecture, ady., 18; Ency clopzedia of Gardening, adv., 378; Timothy only fit for meado ows, 601; of Cabool, 750; tropical | Icehouses, a. foriodthca bis, ty 766, 782, 797, 798, 813, 845 Encyclopedia of Plants, adv., 378 ; Supplement to, 416; Gar- fodder, 215 Ice-stack, to form, 813 dener’s Magazine, ady., 16; criticism on, 37; Hortus Britanni- Gravelly soil, plants for, R Im patiens candida, 246; Tosea, 6, 311 cus, adv, 8785 Suburban Gardener, ady,, 18; Suburban Horti- reenfiy, its ea truction, a: 569, 613. See Aphides India, progress of Agriculture i in, 598 pte gen dy., 16; noticed, 135, 200 Greengazes, effect of change of situation on, 261 : Indigo, from the Pala tree, Loudon (Mrs.) First Book of Botany, noticed, 184; Gardening Greenhouse, ady., Smith, 194: a portable, 244, 795 ; ratios Insects, their destruction, ’s0, 366, 384, 488 for taaen, motion, pas Ladi seieton eine Flower-Gar- of, 833; aspect for, 217; di imensions of, 633; hints on the con- | Insuring glass forcing-houses, 331 den, adv., 16; wed, 151; Ladies’ Flower-Garden of Orna- struct! ion Re 763 ; — their angle, 798 ; to heat a small, 49; Ipomeea batatoides, 22, 4715 ficifolia, 198; adv., 242; Learii, mental peed i pe 16; Ladies’ Flower-Garden of Oma- to obtain a moist atm sphere in, 198; plants for, 89; for borde er, treatment of, 721; stans, "habit of, 325 ; has flowered 342; ty- mental Bulbs, adv., 16; Ladies’ Flower-Garden of Ornamental 9; herbaceous for, me rianthina, 400; ady., 46 torrie pe adv., 826; Ladie’ ies’ Magazine of Gardening, adv., 16; Green Park, improvements in the, 151 Iris, advy., Sutton and Son, 577; Carter, 681 ; Dennis, 745 5 noticed , 163; Practical Instructions for Ladies in Gardening, Grevillea sulphurea, half-hardy, 246 French varieties described, 382; pseudacorus, its roots: substi- adv. Griffith’s hrence = 2 of amet ‘inets noticed, 183; contributions tated for coffee, 413 Luculia gratissima, its culture, 21, 52; at Henderson’s, 55 o the Bot ‘any of India noticed, 671 Iron, oxide of, descri bed, 371 ; Sulphuret of, described, 380 Lycopodium, kinds fora acasgae berg hed Fag" how used at Grigor’s Eastern yo Arboretum, reviewed, 39, 800 Ismene virescens, 118 Westwick, 39; denticulatum, as an e: 521 Gronei's Bruksbey noticed, 199; Tulips noticed, 295 Ivory, vegetable, its chemical constituti Grubs destroyed, 429, 453, 71 Ivy, at Dennis,. 745 ; nee ga ada at the Sock of a peach-wall, M. Guaiacum bark described, 43 . 600 ; time to plant, 153; when growing, 429; large | M‘Intosh’s, the Flower-garden, adv., 16; Greenhouse, Hothonse, Guano, a new manure, its composition, 503 ; its value, 535 specimens of, 88; oid epeciatests Of, 5 49 and Stove, adv., 16; cy apes and Fruit-garden, ady., 16; Prac- Guards for trees described, 261, 365 Ixias, adv., Carter, er, 681 tical Gardener, adv. Gulliver’s Catalogue “e Pla g d, 488 Ixora coccinea, to grow, 121 Madeira, its barticultire, 431; its vegetation, 166 Madras, new Almanac for ee rey., 439 Madras as, temperature of soil at, 4 Magnesia, described, 340 ; eéets germinate in carbonate of, 381 Magnesian limestone, its ’ properties, 325; hurtful to plants, 486, Gum described, 412, 4 me ah Gypsum, pee food. to plants, 87; cined, a manure, 294; i es reparation, 215; how applied, 785 : yee Jackson’ a Catalogue of Plants “Ga sale, noticed, 104; nursery notice ing HL Jas reo om A wer = es to prone, 89; to make sree 281; 518; not, 262 e erop ry’ aN igustrifolium, its excellence, 24 Main’s Treatise on Forest-trees, “477 Habits of plants, value of a knowledge of, 262 Jesuits’ bark, su ubsttute fot, O15 * * aes Gal easee = » adv., 778 Or 2D a camaaiuin Ore John’s Flora ‘Sacra, noticed, 110 Malting, deserved, 9 anuptont Cont. TiGees oboe _ 7 Johnson's Every tay her ik Gen Piswet Gardener, advertised, 16 | Malt-dust as a manure, 281 2 , ulus, its history, 1 Malva lateritia, its pro; tion, gt poh noe ra gle » 34; of Botany, 34; of Chemis- Juniperus communis fastigiata at Roques, 71 Manchester Bot bent Garett; piace at, 647 Hinres, to prakect trie al Sibi Justicia speciosa, its management, 328 Manna.oak, described, 34 Harlngham house pat ee ~ vee ay ane Manure, a pm n of, 231; application of, 615 to apply, Seton Galen dar’ and G dune winnie ter 188s nike K 381; of, 67; considered mperancerhnchipee Shr sin 567 ; rey. nn 7" | Karwinski, returned to Masson, 4 0 ze : eee ~ 64 ob Be classes of, 831; from Kashmir, its vegetation, 264 green phar a cheap 567; for vineyards, 118; for Harte, Mr. ins oe tions Alps whee ty hed he Kensington Gardens, remarks On, 3, 611, 627 cottage ms 845 ; bran i a substitute, 629 ; brick rubbish, Hawkfly, its history, 52 Kensington Nursery, adv., 97 70; dead animals, 701; night-soil and gypsum ‘dust, Haethorgs remarks on, 39; treatm ent of berries, 785 Kew and its Gardens, ady., 210 85; Poittevin’s disinfe bed, neeets of, ou6; 8 saline, effects of, Hazel, kinds to graft on the eomm as “pointment f Gardens, notes on, 535; Sir W.J. Hooker’s ap- wiles Aso mae mn, 150; liquid, its preparation, 233, 521, 769 Heartsease, ady., Henchman, 4 rg ; Jackson, 82; Paul, King ton ent to, 179 : P> ”s Translation of De Candolle’s Vegetable Organography, arianthus czeruleo. eo-punctatus, 118 161; Gaines, 193; Lane, 273; Rogers, i Ghesveitl Ak Mayle, Frettingham, 641; Holm , 17 os 609; at Ree wgheds 7; Silver! bebe » 657; G Hinling,098; on Garden, reviewed, 632 uees and tents, adv., Edgington’s, 16 Salter and Wheelé Marg’ of, 147, 6015 ‘pri ; to ws pastaree hen ae arden, how to crop, 132; rotation cropping, 180; to oat Paribas her ‘garden no ticed, 583 | for beds, 329; lists of, 38, 137, 169, 705,737; to preserve fi 97 ~ i slugs,213, 312; rules to Cor ae Nor echinitine, 207 tee, sng a ES suitable for Marvel of Peru roots, th + 737 Heat, its production, distribution, and preservation, 211, 259, 307, foene 's Exotic Nursery, dared on, age 4 1) 263, ang ha 848 ers’ Exotic Nursery, ni m, 263, 416 323, 428, 494, 597, 683; $43; its effects on the soil, 439 aos | Knight’s Horticultural Papers, adv., 321; review Masters’ Ni » Strood, notes on, 215 Heati uuila’s apparatus, 117; Barchard’s system a3 stem, 165; Cor- a . Andrew, ex! “te rom his life, 351 Mastich as a substitute for putty, 18 bett’s ¢ ‘system a 6, 67,101, 1 116 5 Forsyth’s pla femarked on, Knowsley “Hall, di escril Mats, Russian, to make, $13; Fo nm, 644; Penn’s system and Knypersiey, pe aang at, 263 Matthiola maderensis, 415 principles” kccenbind: 83; bhai anh g 84, 179, 229: failure of Kollar’s on the Insects pectin to the Gardener, | Maund’s Botanic Garden, ady., 16; Botanist, adv., 18 97; wiey’s, remarks on, 180, 277; Errington’s, 326; hs Forester, pe id Fanner, = ty i Maxillaria pre-B a, 344 ton’s, 243, 292; " Rogers’ system, 39;° Smith's system, 14 7. Kyanised timber, experime: Meadows, grasses for, 569 N.’s system, 196: remarks on, 962; Weeks’ system, 307 ‘sys. rooms, 181; to pays, 9, ret ised vineries, 149 Mealy-bug, destroyed, 569 teni at Chatsworh, 369; at Yester, 365; objection o the siphon Mechanic and eottage?, comparison. between, 35 system, 133; the best system, 196 L. Medlar, cause of fruit dropping, 585; treatment when gathered, Heaths, ady., cata Foner 66; ackson, 82: | Labels, pre pared metallic, adv., Gordon and Baskett, 306 265; hina not aeons — gem pr pagation a a 609 #1 est winter- | La Variability, 35 poisonous, 57 a ° n its origin, its | Me maceze, description of some Brazilian, 294 Hedge, neeraesah, 617 . Lacebark 3 : Melia Azedarach, notes.on, 829 Hedgehogs, useful in gardens, 105 Se Lachenalia, Dada formed on the leaf rote 69 Melon, adv,, Cuthill, 2; Ferguson, 698; cultivation of, 133, 281, Heimia salicifolia grandiflora, 799 ae 3 Lelia, treatment of, 416, $32; acuminata, 246, 425; mojalis,| 310; at Honfleur, 261; to grow on ridges, 21 risa to ‘set, 329; Helianthus iphiarsiseegad its value, 133 ; “a treatment of, 295 ; superbiens, bg agere of, 261 eason Of cracking, 569 ; to “obtain pure 553; in India, Heliconia speciosa, at Liege, 118 © Res Lagerstreemia indica a scribed, 105; cultivation of, 132, 137 686: at Bokhara, 503; from, 767; best varieties, 737; eaution Heligan, Benthinia { ee at, 119 4 Lalage hovezefolia against advertised, 781; remarks on advertisements, 814, Helleborus poce wri . Lance’s hamus, its opectn, 483 846; boxes, adv., atin, ara; pits for, dng to construct, 801 Hemiandra emargin a. Sd - Landes, trees in the, 471 Memory sheet of garden Hemp, Indian, 38, pose 366, 750 Tastieene: pit gate ing, remarks on, 428 Menyanthes cos item tee +, 360; its properties, 429 . Henderson’s s Nursery, notes on, 55,183, 416, 504, 735 Larch, ady., Jansen and Finney, 825: seeds to sow, 785; relative | Metzger’s Cereal and Meadow Grasses, economically considered, Herbaceous, its meaning explained, 672 value of, and silver fir, 197 reviewed, 735, 767. - Herbaceous plants, adv., Low and Co.. 7 208: defined, 685; ar- | Larkspur seed, adv., Appelius and Eichel, 713 — their destruction, 199, 749, 830; to protect bulbs from, r gardens, 720; kinds w in a shade, | Lary on the pink, destruction of, ae : 569; mbt 103, 169 ; ereasbotrn 151; Ten 183 errge tne. in, 381 ; injurious to sheep, 617 ; white variety afchans’s North American Sylva, new edition annotneed, 799 Herbs for cottage- - gardens, 81, 180; kinds grown in the 15th cen- of, 5: aeons, pe gr noticed, 384, $32 seine tury, vine & grass for, 153, 169, 553; treatment when cracked, 585 ; to eierpton om est kind for gardeners, 673; mode of viewing eee, # coteeragd te ae aan pg 5 re ad gies Wheat, to exterminate, 52; sieves for, 52 ex, treatment of seeds, 13 Law of Gardens, 436, 50 3 * 2 Hides, their average price for senha 19 nt tren ep Layers, to make, ag Mignonette, situation for, 185 5 suitable for planting near hives, Hi Z, notice of, 703 Leafing of plants, remarks on, 767 =. — cos ane Leaves, propagation. br, 33, "69, 381; examples of rooting, 397; —— aig geared = for; S0, 517, 550 eir in! ion, ‘ their value, 451, 467; secreting glands of in on the globules in, FSi th soe vit 8 ee lands of, 279; value of dead, Minipedes; sake, described, 196 tic destractiveness 319 their treatment bil ady., 161; blue, 4,150, | Mills’ atise on Cucumbers and Melons, adv., 16; noticed, 1 Hives, improved, 764; ian, ascribed, a4 Lectares, botanical, in on oa ~—- z ey Miltonia candida, figures of, 846 Hoare’s Treatise on the Vine, adv., Leeks, their it, 412 Mimosas, examined ae . Bentham, 631 Hobarton, its v: 382 Lee’s Nursery, notes on, 6, 312, 552 Mistletoe, to graft, 1 bioveestios of, 72; will grow on all Hoge’s carnations noticed, 504 Leighton’s Plora of Shropshire, reviewed, 23 Lise ia 672 Hogweed, to eradicate, 537 ; < Lemon and: orange in one rind, 396; orange and citron in one | Mitchelstown, described, 703 Holkham, an account of, 39 rind, 379; orange and citron from the same tree, 365 Moastcargane: noticed, 671 Holly, Christmas, 37; described, 4 6 Finest 185, 413, 716, | Lemon-trees, adv., Marsano, 209: -hardy in Devonshire, 246; | Moisture, atmospheric, to produce, in natin 147; in 740, 764, 797 ; hedgesto make, Os" = treatment of, 213 : ineries, Pie Pare its effects on soil, 439; eles ocd Hollyhock, adv., Appelius and Eichel, 713; biennial, 619 i adv., 24 ent of, 4; soil for, 721 rts of plants, 7 Honey-dew, its origin, 153, 182, 277, + 325, 881, 413, 430, 468, 46, | Lettuce, adv., Farnes, Aa: “to plant plant ot out, 617; to preserve in | Moles, their destruction, 295 _ 501, 517, 549, 613, 645 dite Eatin Sete: winter, 137; oe alle ae wet weather, 617; list of, 103; far a | Moon, her influence on vegetation, 229 criticism on, 37: Icones Plantarum, ‘adv.,| cottage-garden, 84; romaine dela Madeleine, 230 230; fy described, oni ag are ee ae 16; London Journal of Botany, 363 Morphology, defined, 265 Moss on gravel-walks destroyed, 36; on lawns, 72, 401, 508, 613; Liebig’s Organic ena adv,, 18: rev., 7, 23; 55, 119 ay, § ands ed Light, its re—acreeee tion. ; its influence on the gr 3 insects on, their destruction, i a‘getaniantion : ; des 566, parts of gn pe ze — esr rtant element in forcing, Mes, tendency of plants to seek, 718, 748 Ce —atra mig cultural p Pasion ag 182; biue, its effects coloured, its effects on plants, 167, 245, 246, 276, 347 1 Lilium, treatment of, x 802; to hybridise, 63; lancifolium, adv., ig oe a ‘200 “eco Groam’s, 3 treatment of, 68; , treat. in meadows, 537; its growth’ prevented, 7535 Ceylon, forms a eae Ba Eixantie, = exotics out-of-doors at, 312 rant a5 notes on, 38; at, Mulberries, adv., Dennis, 745: Se pa fresh woll to, ses; variation 68, 101; coccinea, its culture, 166; Ma to peers 62; to make spawn, 520; steam for, : G Horticulture, on th 2 of, 8 ap Curiae 164, 180 ; not injured by K wood, g i seine ‘treilitaene of, 769; to flower the valley, ot effects of — howls. A ‘Kysnised Hothed, management of-gat ae = cf tags & BE. treatment of, 233; to force, 185; situation fer, ha $81, 813,| 181: to se om wood 165; with hot lothouses, eivantag ha of iren foe: : Victoria, importation of seeds, 719; white; reason for not gre ater, og Pitt, 1; Bail iors Price, flowering, 672 | Caley ¢ a \ Norwich ‘Garden, 311 ' Norwood Nursery, Beverley, ady., 66 Nun riyer, its y 1 ; Nex varies’ ag at 547 se is eee seeds tis 228 4 poisoning by, K, to ver injured, 217 kinds to common, 689 ; bifacial, 506, 663. 702; retndrkable at Verviers, 96; diaigurea ty cones, 585; spangles caused by insects, 601; seedlings de- stroyed by a fungus, 632 ; i Whalley, 161 ; worthless, 385; British, on, 70, 102; on Tamm: S te; me : ots rugo a > S$ On, 3 Manna, 35 ; 3,102; Fr » 86; seal rl its vals 25 Spanish, remarks on, 340, 365 ; white, 3; bark, its value, 326; tostack, 296; tanner’s monopoly, 19, 293, 343 ; ¢ Odontogio: en Ok mn ssum at bury, Pago Kingsbury, 97 ; dap ohana pul- pean 9 list of ae Sa 281 so ouec ares irae teenie a: ia “ts treatment, 585 5 Rail fer, 3; scale destroyed, 137 FP cn 1a, naar 634; pectorale, 6; Wraym 198 r Ba 5 ete ci eA Fatation of for, 229 ; kinds for a cottage-garden, 84, 132; , 381; fly deseribed, 395; destroyed, 233, 453; 121, Y6s,'s11 Orange and under one rind, el Meena one rind, 379, 471, 613; 3 from the same a0e: the Tance. Orange-trees, adv., Marseno, ssccumaane 417; seit for, a 26, fo renovate, 18, 08 Mi woe: sav, Pouch sa aes a to manure, 72 21 pedi et ay een gt train, Ham sakes at insects, 263, 840; aa i ling, nest, its economy, 436; Tad 45 . ie tees pyrenaicum, is to mar- couinry lant, 6577795 "is | Depo © 50h ebicage, 215, 583 Oxygen, essential to plants, 24 Oyster shelis as a manure, 158 Pr. adv., Dennis, 745; soil for, 217; soil for, 7: » lower, 508; new Ei 57 ‘ itn fo, 788 5 to Balmer, Mts, sheet aneenig Pe : We Carsh netined, 7, 298 nates Tiree net Lando hid . of 18 Wath oe maf eee ace elier, £; management of, 761, 79 ; fo tenn, 817; 20; treatment when too- ‘gamot | Pyrolignite, stceagta of Boucherie’s ame a 313 4 Poly niage of sin Clams 206, rp | Quercus pedunculata, 10 | 116; ee teas wa: * get dion. | Quick, ady., Jaueen aad Sere: oe Seionaaiie ines, szoation tex ; Booth, 495; Ta- |. Radish, adv., 297 ; to graft, 521 ; to raise se 3 3 3; ma- economy, 343 13), Ole, 60k; treatlbesh Ghion Never Hiren na timo, | Races ma 0, bade En be 5 3 ent Wi zen, 769 ; grown ina window Paeereiens 1; G ; 681; snthave cet o Citic a, ub ah Gassjets | 0 wants, Cy ae ee Chiswi Pa rt of, 643 selection of, 87,104, 753; Smith’ ig; Scarlet, | “rune, 2025 beariee ior fiteen years re ih ce one pet 29 n't eee ROSS Rs ee | eee ee ha » tosow s management, Rats, to destroy, 199; destructiv: eine — , its song a ram Ravensworth’s, ee garden noticad oO, ? agascar — Red spider dese: 1 Wie ag anufacture in Genuine 766 ; 3 does not require sweet- pm one os lade cae i oat teow - ee — ening, 7 see ae Renanthera coccinea, its cultivation, — to mak of Ne ne u id, 735 Rendle’s Nursery, Gamus soca vad at, 471 e- nice non 489 Reproduction of plants, history of the, 718 ent of, 281; to cut down, 633 Repon'e Landscape Gardening, adv., 18 Phaius grand bi is, treatment of, oes Rhind’s History of the Vi Kingdom, sev, «9 31D bSarcienict ari, its management, aera adv., Stewart, 81; Masters, 66; T. and E. Brown, Prittest mS MEXICANUE hp ay 9 114; Low, cultivation of in woods, 85; < layer, 601; to Epiiner 7 Eee te raise from sel fi seed vessels should be cut off, 363; cause Phios prt sear tantric 537, 633 of leaves curling, 441 ; self-sown, 52; as standards, 246; second Phone bitren 2 ie plants; $7 from seed, 537, bloom of, 597; at Saltwood, 644; hybrid, hardy, 246; Waterer’s Phos. Saag ada, ck 3 hybrids, origin.of, 473; arboreum to bloom in » 118; oh ies eter deserted 46 at Carclew, 263; i 's Nursery, 263; at St. Austell, M pe Sid trea’ 6 247; in the Isle of Arran, 149; ferrugi 4 bloom of, acm Gk fiyeatcher, $5; auricomus 71,551 569 ; Rollissoni, hardy, 6, 457 : = eect salves ae te ca gloriosa na ae = a ae Rhubarb, ady., Myatt, 825; ~Youell, 325 ; tivation of, Phytelephas, its chemical constitution, 702 2 = aoe ee fora cottage, 34; ate ped Sonar y fordog, Sattar —- lps: 647 G88; Victoria, 103, 167 °° » Groot Wallis 129, Youell 193, W. and J. You “ Seige en 5, Orson a5, Dicken 877, ae 667, Zs ne B82, Lodge 681, A tip: grass, Norman 7 propagatio: 601; | Rice, Indian, 636 at Paris, 4! 57) 5uY, PEI, Richardia a zthiopica, its treatment, 849 Pimelea ilis, Riley’s Enemy of Ferns, mr 50; reviewed, 104 ‘a 3 Jackson, 82; Protheroe, 113; Fames, 7 108 ; fora cottage ; | thém, =, 503; Antell, 609; Rogers’ 637, Chandler, | den, 84; iéng-lesved white turnip, rn oe oe 698; Pontey, 793; management of, 83, 100, 181, 201, 401, 801: | Radiation, defined, 612; observed in in protecting trees, 596 to cut back, 473; to flower in the open popes ie to out, | Rain, qui Sti Salen ates Semen aie 3 Water, its advantage ang : : or, 560; Pi le A 625 Rintz’s Nursery, 663 ig ne-Apple . Davis ; treatment of, 184 ; to fruit quickly, intz's Nurse’ 265 ; Sot wana: as a bottom-heat for, 1 33, 33, 18! ; effects of differ- | Rivea tilizefolia, is fut soils on, 765; best varieties of, Ga: at 764; re- Rivers’ Hints on Root-pruning, ady., 728; Nursery, azaleas at, ed on, 846 ; ‘at Versailles, 150 ; inaaoe thread, 231 200; autumn roses at, 647; notes on, 488 cage European, 534; in coal el ee Stirling, 313; Road. ma aking in 34 ‘Cembray ag rl of seeds, 849; Lamberti, management of | Roberts’ Agricultural Economy, r a eg seeds, Mughus in Irish bogs, 167; nobilis at Coul, 36; Robin —_ its head hooked to its wing, 58: Sabini at Coa, 36; Scotch, varieties of, 751 ; tauricaat Coul, 36 | Robinia pseud-acacia, its treatment, 537 j Pink, ady., Groom, 1; Clegg; 465; Norman, bys: Henbrey, 625; | Rocket, "double white, its cultivation, 217; caterpillars on, de- Lodge, dst > peophieation 19; manure for, 70 ; beds, to form, stroyed, 249; moth, described, 324 584; Remsen of, oe oe oe cestrattion of larvee 2, 400 = olleston Ti ancl a yt ae Pi t-wati length for: ‘phothor notes on, tor" ees epg syrear at s Nursery, Zschynanthus ramossissimus at, 119; notes angustifolium, a styptic, 647; nigrum, cultivation of, 201 On, 6, 279 | Baie eet for melons jag yanimtead ong 150 Tans, nde a jane, treatment of seeds, unknown in vs coun- -grafting es Tac awrrpe coger Ey a5 ooeaiane oh te 441; ‘ante ee its excellence, 245 Dect yeening, newntee See effects, “forest. rr arr ails Pata iors; 88, 105, 121 actin matey on crane polaask ging advantage of, Plantations, the on of neglected, 116, 165. 99 pA gecinata in Errington’s remarks on, 734; Crace’s Planting, remarks on Grins tishe or Gon, 15 vik ee er 796; mentioned by Switzer, Plants, constituent elements of, 7 ; chemi cally examined, 412; 830; ee an ced = 780 ce ie — ee 37; effects of coloured light on, 167 ; tendency | Roots of » their u to seek light, 686, 718, 748; suspended animation in, 715; can- |. not spring up spontancously, 521; food of, 245, 440,843 ; remarks | RoScoea Intea, 719; purp ase: ili i on leafing, 767; substances requisite for the growth of Gaon te | Bose, adv., Rivers,1; Wood, 49; Stewart, 1 ; Lane, 2785 Paul, 657; cut the roots before taking up, 649; to peg down, 430; toturn | Tamer, 657; Baumann, 631; Cattell, 751: to prune, 117; for ont of doors, 737 ; growth of,under peculiar circumstances, 531; | foreing, 798 ; on walls, 569; time for pruning, 721; tobud, 453; to — results of bending down the branches, 718 ; Wp goo strikecuttings, 265, 281,769 ; grafting roots,643 ; propagation of, 297 5 ; on protecting, 779; kinds for 601; from seeds, 102; in a conser , 453; treatment of palling yes d for a greenhouse 7 6m; ey ag standards after blooming, 521; protection of tender, 779; t dow, 72, 21 + hardy fragrant, grape eg ply ; sent by post, obtain new varieties, 441; effects of winter on, 198, 213, 245, Piste pi Pies pete heed Prprconom Co ee peg ah Wr ea Mr. > preparation es, 417; at 247, 438 ; aul’s, ; Pleading pr Flowers, 071 nian 279; a bas ca at Rivers’, 647; at Wood's, 456; selection of, popularly ar- — Plums, a selection of, 38, 617, 721, 849; for.a cottage garden, 69; tanged, 581, 597; for a conservatory, 769, 801; for forcing, 121; for ast wall, 33; for Forfarshire, 169 ; for the North, 769; for training, 441; for standards, 118; climbing, for various for North Wales, 53; age ige 769 ; m Candahar, 7 aspects, 769; autumnal, 769; new kinds raised at , 566; Ickworth Im mperatrice, noticed, 7: Cieabele @ good pre- Wells’ seedlings, 169, 193 Scagee: s new Bourbon 583; serve, 261 Banksian, to flower, 205, 60, 817; cause of white not Lis ca ewan bm ener eg see I Sp gee py cliow, cultivation of 811,813 813; uc] sis, described, 343, ; double yellow, cultivation o: i. bee fiowers nto ser noet Mas $l does not expand its flowers, 297; cause of, 309, 342; succeeds Poison plants of Swan River, r, 687 = on nin oie all, 233; ms robe fa #35, 498 3 i oem bay ; wer, 548; wi erage ss eatment, 4 ce 20> Po —* ee bt a S60; Large, Get: properties | 400g aaas. Noisette, described, 639; yellow, cultivation of, — Polytrichum commune, as an edging, 781 rae He ’Sco! ote, to propagate, 553 ; chafer, described, 452; coccus, Pontey’s Neony. Plymouth, cold at, 55; notes on, 6, 312 destroyed, 829 ; tortrix, dest estroyed, 313; fungus, cured, 633 Poor Law, a few plain Remarks on the, reviewed, 567 i » TEV, 751 oe black, uses of wood, 457; Canadian, at Canterbury, 455 ; Rotation cropping, 687; in kitchen gardens, 1805, how accom- ¥, opinions respecting, 39 ; remarks on leafing, 798 ee: r Cyclopedia of Natural Science—Vegetable Physiology, | Royal gar Productive Resources of India, 258 no’ i Rye, its su superiority for boinc: eed, 6p 185, sel of, for planting, 153 ; tubers } 633 ; to plant, 116, 212; to pe age to obtain , 182; to store, 660; to thaw / , yegetating, 413; productiveness Seccolabium, a new species, Saharunpore Botanic pana ER i i, insignis, 455 oR os Property, right of, in plants, 701, 731, 795, 797, 929 Prospectus of the Chranicie, 1 Pruning, close, recommended, 115; forest mer, described, 312 prone opis, 327 a 72, 105, 198,165, 160, 220; apple its destroyed, 265; 102; Skinneri, described, for, 689° for asparagus, 136 ennai etd ty to sow, 151; conditions BG 6 agement tod Rag dl _ results of aiear Ee tae om » Garnredin plo oj ‘duration of yits destroyed, 72 brown, 6a: tne, de 496 5. ge deatrors ine, Sepa O73. 104 ; soll for small 301 to reget, ee t } germination in ley % ie, room aye if = bal improved by by burning, 95; classes of, 831; names tnd ch temperature Selby’s History of British Forest-trees, adv., 425; rev., 472, 947 large, Shakespeare a gardener, a 349, 437; ber ceo on, 199 ; 9 a gar- parro phagnum, Or Spices = the Poy century, 843 scribed, 61 Shrablan’ hrubs, pei kinds of, 134; new greenhouse, 54; pana de- ge INDEX. of organic substances in, 468 ; preparation of, 668, 75%, pom tale 163 ; etneuin fox bance: of, sind ds for a cottage. garden, 84; Flanders, seed of, de- Lior” Burdock, described, 815 auca, 198 Sinn notice — Orchidacez at, 87, 416 tural Chemistry, ady., 778 ; rev., 848 sprint Stocks affected by the sc: a seed, adv. » Appelins and Kichel, 7 713; Brompton, soil for, 385 ium, at » 750; Agricul- eh, 5, 214, 23, 24 o3 ag — for 337, 366, 432, 487, = ‘or a greenhouse, Bit berg Tey described, 36 a late 521; reason of unfruitfulness, 401; soci be Se fora 69; early kinds, 87 AN Alpine, to raise from seed, 567; to obtain a 3_ Bishop's ; Downton, of oe beds of, 505; to fruit, 414; reason of lescribed, 427 yin pine, Cultivation of 569 * 3 yatt’s u 3 situation for, 550; to fruit, 597 a, to 457 Strood Nursery, po de A ean eae 415; ae 3 recurvum, 832 ae ae subsdeate for 383; “E comhin| South Wales, 22; in the West to grow, 441 Ss Ri 68; wan hs porog 7 a tivation i in the a one 231; trees in Chusan, 6 vit its treatment, 689; capensis, it Cultivator, ady., 16; Hortus Britannicus, adv., heir principles identical, 671; Assam, noticed, 6, Ag rd ey nok Progress in India, 360; eul- its propagation, Temperature, its influence on the vegetation of seeds, 832; at The New Year’s Gift, a Almanac for 1841, oe 55 Theory defined, 413; ee ce, 770 Thermometer, Prichart’s parte fame, ai 225; self-regis- oe night register, 225 ; register, how de- Timber alected by by soil, 350; es Seana tte 6: preservation of, 212; experiments on Kyanised, 117; trees of Seren Eee Ce, wood, : 705 5 Bane, ad. rer, 24 how used, | to make, $03 | req 585 ; Weneiea by cider, 413; honesdur for, 69, 569; injured by gas from es, 601; pots, at oi ray kc, 636, Stapelia, 350 743 Lindley's Elements of Botany, ix tostrations, 250,301 Lover's | 's Tree, 829 Millepedes, snake, 186 Mskrooe housed hot water for, 277s section of, 277 Strawberry-bank section, 521 Ra gens eet js Se ER, Dh 38 Vins punto, ara f 46 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. A STAMPED NEWS PAPER OF RURAL ECONOMY AND GENERAL NEWS. THE HORTICULTURAL PART EDITED BY PROFESSOR LINDLEY. yy a ¢ ‘4. SATURDAY, JANUARY 2, 1841. Piten Gu. yeoeee oe A geen PERPETUAL RO ih ee ll R‘AON (DP ..U «ME. S: aS GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE; PRINCE ALBERT.—T. RIVERS, jun., begsto inform Rose > S20} Gaines’ Purpurea Grandifiora 428 Amateurs, that he is deputed by Mons. iatay, of Paris, to sell by sect ee "Albert Fire-Ball 42 * Horticultural part Edited by Professor Lindley subscription for him this most beautiful of all the Autumnal — Rosabella 3 as Indian Chiep. . ) 42 SL a6 atetuaitle ca tobe better understood in ahd Britain es, Streng Budded Plants, Dwarfs, and Stand ds, will be de- — Little Wonder .42 | — .Lelia Superba . . . 42 - a ge oct le nusuher of warks on the | livered to Subscribers early in May next, in pots, in a growing — Lad hiarapras See See a than in any other country, ta h will bloom freely the following summer _and epee = J ae wahject’ prove tlie patronage it rectites, a the desire there is autumn. may originate fine Rose from seed of the “ee " L ra to extend the knowledge of i beaches a thou- n Rose Gloire de Rosomene, the flowers of which he had | _ A Priced List o: inms and Pansies may be werivme mt sand persons are engaged 1 - =pesichlys of Horticulture as a fertilised with the pollen of some Damas ybrid China Roses. | Post-paid application, contai — means of existence, and Prrageg rey siding a rpceaptenbend seription.—Plant vigorous and very hardy, branches of m Surrey-lane, Battersea, Surre tic establishment erson who can afford the expense e aeuned crooner eae wae are Ceurrer Sta 1 og — *PLENDI Y EEDLING GE No one will, therefore, doubt the advantage which may be de- | branch produces from one to three flowers, rarely more; these, | WJ. NIUMS. The Stock of the following eight beautiful Gera- Tived from the establishment of a Journal conducted in ap honest | pomp t being crowded, as in many of the terminal usters of | Riums, which we is Mr. J. Wilson (and when exhibited and liberal spirit of good-will to all, who ar gedorinterested | 4 ntumnal Ro: open freely, and are produced abundantly from last May at th icultural Society’s Garden at 4 Ho nd Garden Botany, and who will thus have | June till the middle or end of November. Foliage abundant, of a | tracted such universal admiration), is now in Ss of cheap m of intercommunication on professional subjects. ep glaucous green, from five to seven gafiets on each’petiole. In JAMES PAMPLIN, Nurseryman, Seedsman, and Florist, Wood- The plan “proposed to be followed in the man of THE | mild winters the plantis nearly evergreen. Flowers distinguished | Street, Walthamstow, and Lea Bridge Road, Leyton, Essex. GarpENERS’ CHRONICLE, is in THE ST PLAC ) make ita by a powerful fragrance, which the petals retain even when quite Enchantress—beautiful Banos spot, is fine white margin round weekly ‘record of everything that bears upon Horticulture or dry. Colour bright crimson, shaded with maroon parple, in the | the upper petals, lower petals pure white, large size, first-rate Garden Botany, and to introduce such Natural History as has a | . 20 ofthat well-known Rose rge the 4th. A figure painted form 51. ss, relation to Gardening, together with Notices and Criticisms of | }y 4 celebrated Parisian artist was taken on the 18th of Novem- | Louisa—the upper petals fine dark clouded crimson spot, shad every work of importance on th bject which may appear. | por jast : the violet tint is consequently more prominent, as the off to t - ede, with rosy crimson, white eye: lower atale Connected with this part of the plan will be EEKLY CALEN- ld and. moisture of autumn give this tint to all crimson Roses. ‘osy pink, very large flower, first-rate form 5]. 5 DAR ARDENING OPERATIONS, given in great detail, and s figure will be exhibited at Mr. Kernan’s durin ring, | Alice—upper petals very dark crimson spot, del: cately shaded so adapted to the varying seasons hei ope rm of .Flowers—cupped, a little inclined to globular, closely ff to the edge with Pog ror lower petals delicate rosy pink, to the memory—Foreign aud Domestic Correspondence resembling i in that respect the Hybrid China Rose Fulg: When large flower, fine for upon Horticultural subjects—Reports of Horti cultural Exhibitions the flowers are fully expanded, th i stamens are seen. In | Fulgens—fine scarlet oo dark spot, having a light and Proceedings—Notices of Novelties ; in short, everything that cones ity be Rivers begs strongly to recommend this Rose as tre, lower amature 4 or son, fine shaped ficwer, 31. 3s. can tend to advance the profession and benefit the condition of of the an est t of ite clk ass, and _ tter calculated than any other Pe re de tt petals fine mob rose, upper petals dark cloud the workman, or which m: nduce to the pleasure of em- ae aps Autumnal Ros spot, shaded to the edge with rosy crimson, fine form 21. 2s. ployer, Thus the GArpensr, the Forester, the RuRAt Arcui- Plante: will: is ayteneetion eae ane ers, carriage free, at Mr. sassin—upper petals crim: spot, shade th pink lower TECT, the DRaInEr, the Roan-MAKER, and the CoTracer, will Kern rnan’s, 4, Great Russell-street, ince Garden, at 21s. each, petals rosy ee ng flower 21. 2s hase the improvem jents in their respective pursuits recorded. ready money. As-the number is limited, T.R. begs that all who | Maid of petals pink, upper petals fine rose, GARDENING is in many respects the art of creating an AR wish foes plants will send their names to him for entry in a Sub- with large dark Soak; weed form 2). 2s. FICIAL CtimaTE, similar'to that in which plants are Seltrally scription-book.—Sawbridgeworth, Herts, Dec. 1840 Anna—dark crimson spot, margin pure ‘white, lower petals pure found: evidence, however, regarding the real nature of climate, : white, round fiower, reo oy first-rate form, which was also as concerns vegetation, is greatly wanted. ROAD URSERY. STOKE |. shown, and will be leto 51. 58. PHYSIOLOGICAL INQUIRIES, and all those interesting topics NDON.—J. MILNE 7 which elucidate the ony of nature, ane. “the dependence of io solicit nie the ¢ oe or nan onee. aes: M mies -WATER P ATUS for HEAT- hepa eet: rine: mreneh on he pNte Mir erteare General Collection of: Plants, particularly to those in want EE ing LER MIE?, “SWELLING. z ce har feb’ ilk be VAS introduction’ of Inrdfia ates specimens for Conservatories, &c. &c., including Stove, | HOUSES, CHURCHES, and ipso find ba upon. im- pi Taw a- | Greenhouse, Half-hatdy, anda Superior Collection of Herbaceous | Proved Principles, and ‘at. very charges, erected by oe relating to FORESTING, or or ABOR LIC ULTURE. This is one | Siants; “also ‘mericans, Evergreens, and Flowering | DANIEL and EDWARD BAILEY, 2a TOLBORN. he most important subj to which the attention of the pub- Shru' oe, Trained Trees, &., &c.: — Rhod ddicoie exboréum, and D. and E. Bariey having ted much time to the consid an be directed ; for itis often little understood by those who hybridum Camellias ‘from 1 to 12 feet, Rhododendron arboreum | tion of this sathett: and wd tory experience in the erection o: ve occasion to practise it, although the mnt Of property | | iparh fine specimens ef in — Hovea —— Araucaria | tas for the above-mentioned purposes, have, by improve- affected by the management of timber stands second only to that excelia, Cor of sorts: “Grevitien usta, Acaci a pubescens. me in their practice, rendered their mode of heat- of ‘he natural laws which govern the production of tim- Fine ‘washed note Bt a yptiens ors ae , | ing not only very efficient, but ve and have combined ber and regulate its growth, the value of it, the extent to which Palins, Musa Cavendiehis trelitzia egina; Enphorbias of Soate durability inthe apparatus with economy in the charge. They itis infil: nced by soil, and consequently to what circumstances oe Specimens of Orchidaceous plants, Acacias f oh tr cted apparatus in England, Scotland, and Ircland, for ert bed the great inferiority in quality of the Spe- | sorts, Agapanthus umbellatus albus, Ericas of s rts, Epacrises of | Many noblemen and gentiemen, and bi ad the honour to be cies grown in different places, are all points to which attention | —Cit.’ Tree Preonias, kc. ke. The above are fi ‘imen plants pa fl yed by the Horticultaral Society of London; in executing will be given. ‘We shall endeavour toTtollect information upon | ~"y 4°), © 2 fine collection of the following, viz., Verbe! the works of their splendid Secotewants lately erected at Chis that very importan cane ghee 8 cd the diseases of of sorts, Cc our sebor i wick, et the designs of Allred Ainger, Esq. piidert Sir dees 3 grandiflora ; Passiflo! new species, Reh promise taincr t eo ro eeime m — ond to afer fo N Ove Although it i peel not Setcaded’ ‘too occupy our colum: details of AGRICULTURE, yet = Gontexing Be he parent o — Farming, it would beimpossible, even if it jirable, to clude the general principles whieh F relate to ewe cultivation of plants, whether upon a large or a sm: allscale. Whatever, there- ‘ore, may be found im satis & thacreapeet fo aie its er will have much int pro’ ouaioe him: yee are heppy to prpemertre po Hot of co or vo have already tributions from great numbers of their rein ong whom the following may be m cheng Henslow, of Cambrid: ir W.J. Hooker, of Gnee The Hon. and Very Kev. W-. Herbert, x hn Ra of Man oe r hi erie Woe Mascot [Devon: Mei Paxton, Satie to the Deke oF Mr. ire the Gardener to the Duke - Brofemor Granny Booeernee eae the Countess Ge Teteioes, Gad ae Eat a to the Earl ; Garden Mc. J. Wilson, Gardener Mr. paca Gardener ‘0 Lord +e rhage tater a: —_ tchell, Gar 0 Lord Vi crtowel Mr E, Errington, Gardener eS Sir nak Mr. Baxter, of the =~ toon i Oxford meberter. Mr. Campbell, of the Mr. Mearns, chester fat Liv expoo!. Mr. Shephérd, of the ba Becenic —— Mr Williamson; of th © Botan’ c Gar. Amateurs, Nursery arden : terested in Horticultural paras, are invited to fa’ the ‘Editor as early as ‘possible with communications upon subjects of ‘professional Se eee to the Office, ae atreet, Covent-Garden. May be ordered of all Newsman. oi sete truct in etal all descriptions sorts, Liliu foli all Horiieutaral Bubdioge and Sashes, and invite poured: gentle- and yenustum; Ericas of sorts, fize young plants; Epacrises and the public t their vari es Sorts, A ises of sorts, of . Gloxinia rabra, and and. models at 27 where they have the pity-of 1 others ; Fuchsia Justicia and esiiea; Glycine Backhousiana, exhibiting, amongst Uther: metel works, en°Ex e| age rib floribunda, Choroze of sorts, Boi ati enient kitchen apptratts, or range, ad: reed Of het water, and jan arranzem' hitherto been BeOUENE pelees ae ‘public metal of sorts gm Saee as to as Advertisement. — Lists of Prices can be had on application post-paid atthe | others in frac d ou the Continen ees Te Tsery V ESSKS. TYSO and SON, WALLING- a neoat » New rey y eal ra Cinertr FORD, BERKS, respectfully invite the attention of the tenet ater om i pe ae ts daser® i Rags tbe ead eae e * aka? cies Aatee ener Sere oon’ tlemen, and others, to their extensive Stock of American Plants, = wanes yee Evergreen and Flowering Shrubs, Forest oe pine ae ; aes Fruit trees, dwarf am andard, trained and untrained, at ther te ‘diferent ba ache a we * bd . Nurseries, situate as above, on the great Dover Road ; to whiek 00 reared bigest < eieciectink place persons are conveyed in ten minutes by the Croydon Rail- 50 sae a a Lemma che 10 oe way, from the inus an hays per aes —H io ras in: z ¢ ts rou ‘an anted.— 50 Very site Samed vaxietics, ditto 6d 8 Sen ress oftl *; bers quali d most appreved kinds; and 2 vba ge ian Sure teers by post ata sails expense, Turnip Seeds of excellent — foes t ieee —_ ' ° r escription r = culuses, Tulips, Geraniums, Carnations, Picotees, Pinks, Dahlias, presi aed bY “heat br the ve se ; rie a cies Woburaedel” Pansies, a may be Sy Cae ee ee, on prepaid applica- | the Jate Mr. George Sinclair), C., S., and O. havin ng supplied to tion, enclosiag a twopen' the extent of seen? acres with the greatest suc 2° sepia eb i BR. ern red = ljopes berate ailw KERNAN b to infor orm his Pri ends “ay nd veen rendered ed grecresgpe mat A eonmnanesie of-a close e matted « the Public, that he will have every Novelty wot of é being early pia ey paneer if Grass-Seeds FLOWER and in. eres onto gent ue ts be skeer owt hi ragged obtained from their establishment. FLOWER and VEGE ogues 0: ic’ a LAS fe basen nplcntons a8 also Caniogucy of Sess Riven | SANG qiGUa" BiCOFEES, TELLOW PICOTEBS,& PINES re | Roses, nuit Trees, and popular Catalogue of Trees hrubs. | © Wal b 4, Great Russe ae Covent Garden, 4 ‘ GROOM, alwort » near London, 2 ATARN ~aSee appointment Florist to Her Majesty, 5 to] ‘ R MAR having entere nto an en- to the attention of the Ni , Gestry, Pablic his ex! ve ® gagem a. the Royal Botanic aie of London, arts sof 8 the above Flowers, which he = offer. at yery he begs leave to return = cere thanks to his friends and the eee or ices, — =~ also a good _ ee ae see See on public for the support which they sam pasa 8 given him. In nctatu’ and album. Catalogues cai forwarded iy post on consequence of the above engagemen astaken Mr. MANLEY | appli Es into partnership, by whom the —, pote Seed business will <5 ASSISTANT SURGEONS, rer future be conducted; from whose gag experience and panc- t Tete Es d a iste tual attention they hope to receive that support which it will be Uy pe ’ ‘ ape ‘ ie = their constant endeavour to di 2 e requisite OU’ wrest at THRESH! - 3 su Nui ey, Dec. 23, 18 j ‘en ns, may be had on at : G - — EAST IND aa W. fOUSE, next door te Somer: ea LE rina List “of first-rate ane | ae etna ee NIUMS, raised by the Rev. R. Garth and E. , Esq. ts dilies and Gentlemen proceeding €? 1 India, or ine a CALCEOLARIAS, rais! Ae iy reen, as exhibited at ine Chiswick | nies, are i t he ae adhe e, 9 a. Horticultural Show ; a drawing of some of them will be in the and most durable rn ase pliers ESAS Se cine Florists’ Journal. Shrabby and Herbaceous, of first-rate quality ; i ery superior B ated. NKS, E ~ an vir on also other varieties by Messrs. Foster, igo "Danae Blip 1 Fi zs -* ae ; pacer pped, Pansies, Picotees, Fuchsias, Verbenas, &c.; Daniias— ipse, Gs Be cei Beaumont Rose, &c., with mos! es in culti- HE GA ARD EN POCKET ALMAD NACK, eS ee Sloane: ah — aie = I Suorvt’s Articles on the Auricula, Pink, Pansy, ‘0. (8 with Bos aon, Piccotee, st ipa Dahlia, — +. is now Ropathe and may eller: Ta 3, Stan ‘Carnat ITT and O. (Successors to to the “Jate GEQ. | Se had of a! Books eceatate nds STRATTON,} No. 4, Arlington-street, Camden Town; beg aaae GF BATH D ienve'to acquaint the Nobility, Gentry, and, otters Sots MCT CAULIER, N URSERYSIAN, BATH, H,. continue to erect Apparatus for Warming by Hot Water, for fee pee Baap : OntictituRar, Domestic, afact - Purposes, upon ees D eet TS gid oats the most effecti ociples, and upon more moderate e Cha arges | of the ghoes Dahlia se’ ( than any f in the Kin: ‘Hot water Boilers aa who have purchased or ‘oe on improved principles. Old and in vé Work reconstructed | ous to the auth of Jan i be n the Horticuitural “perfect, References fink chhas iven whe; r 5 - 25d. ron ire o 2 ui . ‘that do not come from either of s UGH LOW ae, CO, NUBSERY MER, &e. ON. In submitting the Fm | ust feo public inspection, beg to state that all orders they may be favoured with shall be promptly attented to. Andromeda floribunda, 2ls. ta with Gloxina rubra, dwarf, _ very fine, cals) Ara eedling | Gloxinia ru! ubra, Seen 7 fg : pee high, - a elomerae; 10s. Gd. Azalea indica foliis variegatis, | Hardenbergia digitata, 10s. 6d. Sis. Gd. Ho a Manglesii, 15s. Georgeana, 2 a wares 3Is. 6d. macrantha ns , 18s. per Bes 5 ita> Koightia cas 63s, phenicia eg 10s. Gd. rus tawa, 63s. spectabilis, 21s. ebbconeit 2 species from pe cc 10s. 6d. Swan River, decidedly new, gata, 7s. id. to 2s. and distinct from each other ; Banksia gra 10s. 6d. j if them d bed as ce- lestial blue; from 21s. to 63s. rani, mn 6d. each Menziesii, ag Lobelia discolor, handsome, occidentalis, 10s. 6d. dwarf-growin ” species, the Screens, pean cho 21s. leaves of which are beautifully pape alongiflora,verysmall,} shaded, flowers blue, — Mahonia tenuifolia, 14 a Harrisii, 21s. to 42s. | Mirbelia dilatata, 10s. bd. “to 42s. Saerrinaeaees ressinum, small, | Pimelea ee ectabilis, 63s. to 105s. 147s. | nana, 10s. - Dyaadra pteridifolia, 105s. Salvia regalis, 1 is. 6d. nervosa, 63s. Statice et 1s kd Sis. 6d. Fuchsia corymbifiora, 15s. Telopea speci , strong, Gesnera mollis, 5s. 1s. 6d. Gesnera, anew s . HARD-WOODED GREENHOUSE PLA IN COLLECTIONS AS UNDER, Rage at 9d. each zNntie at 2s. 6d. each 1s. 6d. each 3s. Gd. each wit ith maay species of more fesent ‘ntroaiction, from 5s. to 21s. per plan’ OUBLE ema ; Fine healthy name from | foot - = inches high. y ° different varieties, b 42s. o do, * bos. is do. Camelliacand' iissima Ss oe EEE tn 7s. 6d. to 42s. Donkelaarii, she pr 63s, King, 7s. 64. to Landrethii, oo éa. ‘to 63s, With about fifty delicatissim: picturata, 7s. 6a. Seen of England, 105s. imbricata, eximi, one triumphans, ere pera erii, Siphinann i, &c. &c., from 3s. 6d. to 105s. per Planta. EPACRIS. Fine Flowering de = Six Sorts, 12s, per Dozen, ICAS. id: s. per doz Juliana, 15s. pues ip mirabilis, per doz. B a, doz. The above are all fine Flowering Plants, and may be had in collections as noes or separately :— 24 dissimilar vari esforiss. | = dissimilar varieties for 60s. 3 do. ac J ga do. B4s. With 25 others, from 5 about a aes ch. H. L. and Co. can bag sembly eta ae in quantity :— Fabiana seabeicntns 3 2s. per do: — thus Russellianus, 2s. 6d. Fuchsia fulgens, 9s. ee ach Hovea Celsii,30s.to 42s. per doz. Stylidiam laricifolin m,23 6d each longifolia, 5s. each . *graminifolium, 30s. per doz. Lesechen pas - be Srmge ciliatum, 5s. Sent out by per mistake € as saxifragoides GREENHOUSE ‘OREEPERS. In 25 Sorts, from 1s. 6d. to 3s. 6d. each, strong, 2s. Gd. ong va prismatica, 2s, 6d. each = atrosanguineum, 3s, 6d. Anemone Apennina, Is. doz. maculatam, 7s. 6d, each alictroid 8s. per doz. canadense tifolia, Is. 6d. each eximium pogon, or Cymbidiam pul- lancifoliam album, small, chellum, 15s. per doz. 10s, 6d. each Conostyli ifolium punctatum, do. each fee = 6d. each Seon ge ae| nee oe da cis - folium, 7s. 6d. act pacer rege 158. per doz, oats ignea, 12s. per doz. — grandiflorum, 4s. is blephariglottis, 12s, per per d Drosera ; filigormis, 78. Gd. Parnassia asarifolia, 1s, 6d.each apr grandifl: 1s.6d. py scgay gentianoides cocci- nea, or fruticosa, 12s. per doz. cs 7s. Gd. Murryana, 7s. 6d. pond Gentiana alpina, 2s. 6d. Sabbatia caryimbose, 2s.6d. each foiia, 73. “6d. each Stachys speciosa, Is. 6d. each poten orig ee ad. each guinaria canadensis,gd.each >is. 6d. eac! lutea, Is. 3d. each 3, - ~ Helonias Asphod: 2 18, 6d. | Viola fratescens, 3s. 6d. each each pedata, 15s. per doz. dioica, Is. 6d. each picta, latifolia, 1s. 6d. each palmata, h Habenaria ciliaris, Is. See A and WARNER, prrensiges Collection of Veretable, Agricult: lo t assure them that the utmost car in them from the finest in the kingdom. i Flower and Vegetable Seeds, comprising every novelty of the season, im- ported and of, ish growth, will appear, as usual, in Harrison’s: cs Ca "in canes and March : and thi trust the articles: — = ation of the eo and Herbaceo Plants, Pinks, pp ae &e. &e. ummer montbs.— t tures. Field Tur- stocks.—Garden- Seeds for all climates, in aged FLOWER-SEE &e., w DS, Genuine, in the original Sealed Packets, to = _ The same in THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. Wwar- -~ JAMES cauren, oe man and Florist, 238, Hicn Ho RN, OND The Packets gate only adap! ed oF eH Gantt s.d No. 38 splendid varieties iio’ German Aster oe The same in smaller Packets . . tig very ese been quilled German Aster he " The maller Packets « . . 7 fine Rackets Pyramid 1 German Aster’ e Pitt . he same in smaller Packets . . . -. 8 fine varieties Dwarf Germa . oar The same in smaller P: * . . 60 varieties German Stock ° . Pay Rs 4 f The same in smaller Packets . . pe | - 25 very fine varieties Dwarf German Stock oe ma The same in smaller Packet: . . . 12 finest varieties Dwarf Ger k : Sim The same in smaller . . ’ - 12 finest varieties Branching German Stock eis \e he same in smaller Packets ‘ > > - 12 fine varieties Wallflower-leaved German Stock . The same in smaller Pac! . * 15 very fine varieties A mnal Nosegay Stock : he eins ets . . 16 fine varieties Water or oy Stock oe 8 very fine varieties : Winter me Biennial Stock Packets ower ° F << bel ow varieties Double Hollyhock . varieties Zinnia pcg . tion to the above, J. C. has well as all kinds a aa en- cg which a Catalogue will be sent on application (pre- [N° E * In addi n hand uy pwards « of 1000 Pid the pe Varieties of FLower omen comprising the finest as ad pn yc Seeds ; of aid). HORTICULTURAL oe eee AND HEATING HOT WATER. WEEK ARCH ITECTS, 2 GLOUCESTER E, KING’S ROAD, Hothouse Builders and Hot Water Apparatus Manufact a to invite the ary ti ili turist erections ee kept ready made. Their Hot Water Apparatus, which is kept in acti the a simple and economical nig psencog be had and their works seen at Mrs. Lawr TSO: of E. Fauster, — tory, Gloucester-place, REAT = rel Ses ces SER ritiny ee erection of this focunoeae onse! ae ie "a ee of hey Se bg pted there. Its striking novelty an owl d; and havin treet, St. Jami m the ‘exec euiion. y the d Upon application by letter, addressed to James’s. OBLEMEN, po _ ee that they may be furnished” with: Liste of cular rding es above article, LEME arehouse, 8, Jerm for small or Ey mses accurately cut to the iepelmeiesiants Patty, t, and every requisite for G: Melon. ers. , is u Purisatad mer nce’s, Ealing Par! sig ip + BY &e., CHELSEA. helsea ; Clewer Sabicea Cheam ; and at acnad Che! sea, ihe appearan ackn edged ; now under, posted aca satistactorily all the various trials to which every alteration mperat can of seaso: rature™ subject it, its success as an expe- rim hcenevnie t = ae as complete. It has Aim tablished ip exyet superiori ry other method now in th as m son unrivalled in the qualities necessary for the retention of heat and the transmission of light, the work at Cha’ h may be safely pronounced to bean exa' of the most pe! ¢ syste of Horticul Jazing that has ye! evise ae JOSEP: KE, 8, Jermyn-s Sy 00, Chats- | ticultural purposes, to the Glass. and Mod Glazing which have been so successfully employed at Chatsworth, he has the kind perm of Mr. Paxton, under w judi S Management the works at the Conservatory w conducted, t ke refer- ti 1. & E. ned S SELECT LIST OF OF Buta! W_DAHLIAS FOR 1841, The xed award of vty ot bemaper we them at the Principal open Sho ows during ihe mat sa will be sufficient Suarantee that ig are all S Flo ae Salisb an Plain . + Ist Prize . 36 — & . io ist - 24 Sept. 2 Calne . . . ® {ESb. 50 + 48-3 a a ee ee ee ae + | = Wallingford . . 6: MEO ogee So ig SAE ras ss Stewards’ Prize. Ist , Pye a: pes x» ll Cambridge . . . “oS. ae 7.6 oy ee a ee eer > eee x 16 Norwich. s 7 * err |” aes SO ee a tf Bae . . ° , Lode gees 4 Mee a ov a ga Sted) Saree | eee os» 92 Oxford .. e ° * ae | ee wo ir 85, ee ” . . . . - Ist 5, ¥ Je & Hs a . . . . « Ast gs ee | ee FEET. 4, ¢. Andrew Hofer (Holmes) dark crimson o . tu 5 3 6 qe big arms cupped yellow =k 3 Bro cate, deep ruby, very ‘constant, semeet sing ait the properties of First class sh lower . 5 —10 6 a Bijou, lilac and puce, beautifally shaded, quite a new variety, and certain show flower. , . + 3-—0—7 6 as besser white delicately tipped with lavender, a constant and su- perior deo flower. his Dahlia from its unrivalled form and deli- cate texture, will be an acquisitio to the most limited grower » 3—4--—10 6 3 Curate, lilac, an indispensable show flower, being precisely the shape and habit of Hope, very constant , 3 —4—10 6 » Defiance, deep purple, beautifully ar- yaperds upped petals, ga xquisite show flower 3—i—10 6 Beauty of the Pisin ¢ ‘Spa ry), white and purple | » 3—0—5 0 Bedford Rival (Mayle), rosy lilac. » 4—0—2 6 Bishop of §: eo sine aes glossy purple, ‘good 3—4—5 0 (Jackson), rosy purple . 3—0—2 6 pisckeiuney te ay buff. - 4—O0-—3 6 Conservative (Low we), light rosy purple, fine + 4—0—5 0 Defiance (Squibb), oe, bene » 4—0-—3 6 Defender (Squibb), +» 3—4-—2 6 Elizabeth (Foster), salm . + 4—0-3 6 Grenadier gy aio light orang . + 3—-4—3 6 King of we Bove 3 Thompson. delicate light pe mde Pest) sonata BPG § 5 rsh S a3 eg i 5 _ Lad M Maradona (Jeffries), lilac . 4—0-—2 Le Grand Bondine eet. light shaded purple, extra fine show flow 6—0—?7 Lord Dudley Stuart (Jac n), a son 4—0—5 an Ns eres * geben white delicately, alia me well in the centre, bey we coi ig 4—5-—10 6 Maria (Wheeler’s), light rose, of the finest form, " F —41-7 Maresfield Rival (Mitchell), shaded claret | 6—0—2 6 Metella (Begbie), -* _Barple, asad Hie and Noe pt . —3—5 0 Lh Neeld (G: z - 3—4—2 6 Nichol. 4 Nickleby (i [Pastry badd 5—0—5 0 Penelope CBensiey), light, capped. Pexere! ony 3—4 $6 Phenomenon (Whale), white, winet with "rose, extra show aoe = 4—5 7 6 President of the West (W ale), dar k cfimsén, fine 5—o0—3 6 Pickwick (Cormack), cia purple . 3—4—5 0 Queen of England (brown), white and lav ender 2—3-—3 6 Regina (Gregory), crimson, fine —4-—-5.6 Rouge et Noir (Ansell), dark shaded 4—0—5 0 Scarlet le Gr: pare phsipmegec sy oe scarlet, petals ed good s finely cupped, very Pp flow: 10 6 Sir Wilken Middleton (Gaines), bronze and red | shaded 3—-0—3 6 | Springfield Purple (Gaines), crimson and purple shaded 6 8 Unrivalled of S ts (T T#or or), dark purple ‘ _- =s — pes 6 ie Windsor Ares Bagi) aa es po (ome . —4=8 bf ellow —o— PR TC < TMi PROVED APPARATUS for WA manufactured and fixed Manchester, The simple, safe, economical, and heathfal nature of this in. vention has [ed to its adoption iv all parts einen kingdom, for es, Chapel PAT NT and ee by W, Mery tian, ot eae “Street, bean 9 and ventila' sine: Sigg ic ag aldives, hurches, Chi Private Houses, Offices, Ho eR, It meets th oot of bathe wine regtrr bo in the largest places of and Pau moperature, combined with an kes pent preteen dy of ventilation. It is ada: prival i ma) lass, Oran. which it may be Lage Ree to cpeaie, Jermyn-street, St. bitinT Saupe a ITISH ILE? GLASS for HORTICULTURAL EN. oni ery which has been adopted 80 age ert otc Pa = oregon toJ. DRAKE, Plate eet, St. Jam ames’s, vito cuted upon the lowest wholesale terms. Window moto Solder, Prepared Cemen Glazing. (CUTHILL’s ME} ao & SNOW’s CUCUM- evil an lon, Tr, containi Xx seeds, w ted letter YOUN NG MAN, t P norman a on nthe ee of 2 Melons wile se sent on the = somigioe 2s. Gd. eac ress to » Florist and rticulturist, Lo AN ph Peo JS and 20 FEOre | Wak, penwark Hil, Camberwell, west teedee oho tes sores a Vey gb Beer none Age? SUB. | ral ht = ds of strong ae a Lisianthas Russellianus aeemeiee with ey management a Journal, is oe sate cate Maca es good —- of the in request of, as HSIA CORYMB acquired a excellent system of Stenography, which, in g | - si ime, il nab hm fo pve verbais port ata : » STANDISH, NURSERYMAN, BAG- addressed to §.R., 45, Silver-street, will with bo eStzone Plants t 21, each —See etanicel Register desired) the ordinary use of open fires. of principle and oan n it adds an important one of on, which su: entirely the igri Sy ting of gent Pipes 0 of any air. | on for or warming the hogs ans , 2% W.and I. W. also fit up extensively Hot Water Appar “i jouses and Conservatories, and have the most Spoemans ee ‘erences. It may suffice to et mmense Conservatory Devonshire, which is no¥ a Young Man wi years’ practi — in first rate multifarious mat , and maintaining by every proper means the connected wil ese branches of rural economy, are t see : esetily } ee | ct points towards which our attention will be more particu- barca a ected. regard ba what are | called Florists’ Flowers, we are with the —— to which our Journal is devoted. One “tered ari with respect to Political matters. Gardening, and auctions really deserve poor. we shell 'n not allow teas to as is too often tics in hold atindtee s perfey Sadie of all parties species ig oe chet timber ine The ha | ternal marks by which they are distinguished w The Late has rag Sa leaves, of a im texture, facility | =. Tong taps stalks, and shallow, rather regular inden- rns also sit close upon the branch, or at Jeabt rte very meagre white oak, on the con- stalks. The trary, has thin dull leaves, with (very, short green stalks, P Whener ever public eastires which we approve of relating they will 7 5 . * ohl. are invariably p Ke the case, to e destruction of their value in the eyes of have our earnest support; and whenever we paar A the public, ae the disg' wrong, we shall oppose them by every means in our power. in such procéedings. At iration of every y' pub umbl d i ded | Index of the horticultural matter contained in our Pp phy 1 ] wh | pages, which will thus oe tener De mnret Sad Mevcentte . ex! + to ‘our a A = = ip that | record of the progress of Botany Gard = te the general of vegetable |i Some very absurd letters have lately appeared in the new Wspapers co pe a said to be. entertained by of fa hould n of is ah athe’ n but at the present da’ | be familiar to perso | mules are to Weféund beet go nnatural produ ch big fh their Ae; noha it is nota little strange that mere varieties It w was Ww for Linnaeus to entertain that for he did not ser what has just been stated ; aay all that has been described opinion, conversant § ith or That very likely ; and will be 1 Shiterm termediate between won but they do a prove the parents to be the same. the differences between the wood, the rr t now only for t the sake of | If, however, leaves, and the fruit of our two native oaks are thus ma- nifest. so clearly se’ settled. late Sir James Smith industriously fpr to that a story of the red oak timber bei ing very in- defend the e plan which has been uld be e i peace =" S Tue printed cr gorge ate ng agers oe *F d profession, or for os Gardening merely as Hp othe it is with reference to the stmetoned toplis that a Weekly ware is eee ecessary, for the e art of Gar- Pet it were Bay for the ‘aay ‘discoveries bd sua and the a ap- plication of them as they arise to ractice of cultiva- tion. For these reaso hae handsome or useful p! reasons ig Se Phyl, Systematic | are concerned, ey ‘3 J ot pen Tat nt how ever, fear ewe apres ih fon much | learning. We perfectly un understand that Tect it for themselves from a its original sources: under ventually adopted, as we en it will be. | rior the true Bri ly contradicted by the hae ir. ates who, e course of e as an aibitecs. oo ana a the fact. This ea oe that + .£¢th | was nm up, was betiont SY from the | fi that of the white oak, yet pee ts ight to’break it ; purposes, it was highl: able that of the Seas, a ship ia respect is eepporton le by a late writer oe in _ “Pew Cyctopaa,w of the tw Ve ae che —_ on) has: ned oak, " his-exten- - 4 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. . [N° 4 a desxts therefore trust I shall find among your readers, | sions: the subjoined table exhibits the ci fe if Id not help regretting tl will each contribute what he f the largest, tak L | feet fi heg d ld be utterly neglected.—H., Bath. ae A regarding this, the most important question con- Neel “2° 3 ivfahe “No. 8. .: Wt Oen. { nected with British Fo: (I am glad to see yo 2 ae e sae ee FOREIGN sty aan ics NCE employ E to so pe- Sle ae Jo Ses oe eT a Ne —I have this day received your ti Jael. eee | ee 1l Ss ARGS Lie aca e Gar = en newspaper, which I shall be e en! tirely agree with our instep ailect or. the Siri Wid or) © happy ie sapprt as Mes Brera occur. Dr, ery great neigh secggek ascertaining by multiplied evi- 5. - 18 0 13 « Led Wight i is ni ni ng in igaieg ou | dence what the really are regarding the timber of ar Pay oe. 4. . 23 0 quality, palm e red ond ae soak, oF or ie Quercus sessiliflora and No certain record, I believe, exists of the “ge. of these inlets verde as it is called. pl i articularly invite our cor- trees, but sees are seeabiy coeval with the first Betch- is as white as this paper, ae in taste not pds: worth Castle, founded in 1377, when ‘ Jehe itzalan, | e distinguished from the finest cane sugar. The subject ject. Rapedtnoests or oe as to durability under | second son to Ri , Earl of Arundel, had licence to | of sugar is engaging so much attention among us now, equal circumstances, and the com) comparative of the | imbattle his siabbe haage here.” In a little work called | that I should not be surprised to find 20,000 tons ex. * the “Garden of Surrey, "' ” there is is an extract from the} ported from the Madras presidency annually, before the pcb ot pep ipontensinenry Tnorier to render th tu Monthl where oie Aikin th ti eaqurstien | of five years. Cotton, too, is augmenti subjoin —_ on other tree: At Approehing Betchworth pies immensely in the amount exported. fou port re hicks a woodcut of the two. es Dorking, the road i leads throu! gh an oute r park, | when I visited it five years ago, could not give employment S rted is toa single screw, now employs two constantly, and two ys and of forms which a peiatey would rather denominate | more are building. ‘All this looks well.—Indigo is also e peculiar manner = which | on the rise, and the improvement, within the last few _ this tree sends off its —— making elbows nd sharp | years, in its quality, is so decided, that Madras manufac- _ it turers are in hopes o of soon being ; ab e to compete with 'y ig on 1 the whole, me it ve lar. & jan 3 5 arg e Pala-tree (i rightia tnetora, and so excell in traordinary ideas of gigantic The inne = park, appari that when brought as a prize article in com- at the extremit mit of which the he is situated, has two | petition with genuine indigo, sted judges could not, from fine avenues, the one of elm wae . the other of limes, the appearance, distinguish the difference; but it is said not tallest I ever beheld. This inst i is a triple avenue, resem- | to afford so permanent a dye as the other, and does not bling the nave of a sae but greatly surpassing realise in the tenant perket more than 4s. 6d., while the grandeur the works of anda. The trees tou ch other sells for from 7s. t This, however, promises each other with their aches, forming on the outside a | to prove a zi Seo addition - our exports, as the tree is vast screen or wall of verdure. Within, the branches eas rec and in the be: st state du uring the hottes' vie eason, meeting at a great height in the air from the opposite | wh all other still ight sides of the rows, form Gothic arches, and exclude asic mbes out, with ss Hpac despatch, pail first every ray of the meridian sun.” At the time Dr. | of hi f Ico — ot expects to have it | ikin wrote, forty-two years Bs: these trees were, no resis shed next week. It cont ains pia piace in doubt, in a more vigorous state; price in their heads a very Phares ys at least as compared to most at least, ough braced peer by iron rods and b efore. He has ae ot ihe plates ins, they are mere skeletons of their former great- | fi third volum e of illustrations ready, ness; the trunks, too, of several show infallible si f hese he | blish heginn ning Ut the speedy decay. St ill, however, ord retain sufficient health year. éy might be out Se etoneeed but his publisher to prod whi chin and pte annually eee large almanack, which r + hl, T: aS qt quality to imported but such things cannot well be hel fruit. The soil is ligh ty rough the hot season here the heat = the soil is is Bee Rem (an nd burns veryth: ing. This ason G ; a a comparative ly oe stratum of sand, “barren in saben May) I pl itl ce, and yet evidently maeterk sufficient nutriment to ar Batata md strange to say, though for nths we scarcely a shower of rain, they oa, beech d u too, that ina — A maple (A cer campesire growing in stom few Sree oar ee ee grou and oe roe a Ane: part of the park,must have pre as least twelve or | carpet of herbage as I have never, even in nm -€x- thirteen circumference w! eee its prime. The oe — in — — The shee rie the | avenue of lime-trees (Tilia Bice so graphically de- | soil these was lower by about 10 degrees than in scribed by I Dr. Aikin, still exists in health. But = aur toil, at four i bichon under the surface. Farther ex- i in our periments are. in ae Availin ng myself of the hint, our fined days, when it has been priedener that avenues, in- | young next hot season | stead of objects of beauty, are nothing more than “ formal | to keep the soil cool and moist, through the hot weather, lines,” ‘* wind-spouts,’”” and other objectionable things. | and manure it afterwards by being dugin. In this way I AL a : Undoubtedly, strong objections might be urged against Kare to be able to raise coffee plantations, hitherto a yo : ye avenues in many situations ; but they do not deserve the | desideratum in Madras . White Manis pte S condemnation of some m odern i improvers. In- Munich, Dec. 3, 1840.—You will learn with surprise si ig fae ee asa! Y> rae f aris- | that M. de Karwinski has returned to Maxie at the ex- Se Id pecially when in combi. pense of _the Russian pen This is a serious HOME a baronial i hich t is highly of = , and it is pes we shall _ Blue Leschenaultia,—. of mine has lately pur- pease and I will venture t hat th t i carcely see h ie again. Per lind eee LE satrirwtepnialcnaseiadigmumes irae e has ish all wav 1 Mistoey for Tt It hink, a score of the the magnificent wall of of Scags pes prnttiee eed ay one in | learned Russian Societies. Another r young Bavarian, Dr. the river Mole, Toth, _ of the President of the Ecclesiastical Protes tant : sakeer feelings of admiration.—J. B. Whiting. hi Blue Barley.— this autumn at Heidelberg, I tet the pe from Mr. Parag ar that the. curious kind of barley | eastern provinces “1 inde, He coabered fi for Bonar which has lately been introduced into this country, wi t, and, we hear, eed >cnaapinr oo nteneasiagnnpingapes. ani ago. : are?—C., Swaffham. = - is si among other things that bods 8 goes Athrotaxis — Leonotis Leonurus.—While oth hunting aft is not different from Cunninghamia., M. Seitz, late — 1 wh ity is often their chief endati | sane sek have bottle advanced by the king to shall content myself with mentioning an old and neglected | thecharge of all the royal gardens. a species which I saw in great beauty in the nursery Paris, Dec. 20, 1840.—Very few persons in England — Salter and Wheeler, Victoria Nursery, Bath, last November. | have any idea of the vast number of flowers which are ‘ T allude to the old Phlomis Leonurus, now changed by daily ex exposed for sale in the markets of Paris. Almost the wand of some botanical conjuror into L is Leonurus; flori the cit aged in not that I mean to dispute the propriety of separating the | this branch of the trade. The principal. market is held plant from Phlomis, for it certainly does not resemble it Le ee ee on the Quai aux Fleurs; much, whatever Linnzeus may have thought to the contrary. | and here are assembled in the open air, both in summer Ra ee ee ae et and winter, more than 400 florists, w neath pee t th eight y cr i et igh and produ Bower piany nh Tueesteat of this trade ma: seem -atran, e to those unac- ang ee to 24 inches long, re ae is eg sarge aioe flowers with all classes in this nts oe a en geg Be rod ‘approaching to allo fiends on their Vrth-dy, or the tof =o patron saint — of its blos: the elegance of its habit, and | and other things plants and soe . be a large dem pi = a among: the facility of its cultivation, together with its season of | given: Pap tro seammgte shawersred that | flowering (October and November), render it a most de- | marghé!? 4a, hower everything- li sirable acquisition So It is a half. | ig Se "nok that all the plants are of an ord ifoli b ' 5: Bs Sake anata age : hows, or cold-pit ; but if i at markets, and ans © others JAN. 2.] THE GARDENERS CHRONI CLE. ; 5 stan ai a nd as all these propagate very freely b y buds, rece. , and leaves, the others are thrown into the back- ound. Gloire des Rosomanes, a. only prgange ead, te for ced for the last two or : chee the pre core tons, a real ages Lee with what pectieactr ns these kin arket t purposes bu t the grand resource in “cc rose du almost incredible ex tent, in e most a r whether ly blooming. There are also se everal varieties of wa are “betachel glycine, violet is always in dem: &e. he tree v and, and readily sells at twenty and thirty sous ; anothe eiaaibe is the yrtle, not grown nag as in England, but with a round trained are no such apace pdr mn of er ce: y “Th er in Paris as those Sd Pere ayers apple Place, or Mr. Sm See the _ (generally called nomics) 6 Boulevard du Mont Parnasse, at the digas ae ane of ing the better sorts of pla and for orced flowers, having the advantage of a goo stocratic quarter of Paris, together with every requisite to render the was standard, andkeeps till February. The Bergamot Cadet has the property nek rege aan kd for a long a ne perry oh from the same tree. The tes Curé is the e as the ar of becom in flavour from a ‘ctundard. The Ne plus Meuris appeare the best-flavoured pear on the table. INNEAN SOCIETY. So peed pmo Read, a paper ; Esq., of plants allied to cqibaesen order ; together with observations o _ genera consinetiog that order, and their affinities. A n of dried me — of Ferns collected by Mr. Cuming in the Philippines ig Ww. or eh Fors! Dec bd G.B were Maton were remarkab! them were many rare species, such as a alternifo- bes jum, Grammitis Ceterach, Aspidium spinulosum, and Thelypteris, ROYAL AGRICULTURAL eae o OF ENGLAND. woes peter ate ob Henslow delivered a Hap upon dis- of corn. ject was to explain nature of the mala- dies that corn is ite 05 whether he the carachen of parasitical Sam poor thr by, the first class ; and _ pepsin ar 9 ro to the opinion that such produc- intaneous, or accidental; and he —— all. _ called ii e by will of the Almighty. The Bunt fangus (Uredo caries), called also Smutballs and Pepperbrand, was described as a powder occupying theinterior of a grain of wheat, the only corn it attacks. The microscope shows bs to consist of minute balls, 4,000,000 of which may be included na grain of bi wheat; and each ball is filled with minute seeds or however, turned out a co’ maples ettare, sat four s ort pri i so that 10,000,000 times jad first 4,000,000 may be any ave seen it change hands three ie with loss to ponent up ina single grai Hence the excessive minuteuess of , from some cause or other Fculctes are ms ome parts, as facility » —_ sehich they are dispersed. Th fects whi aline substances, such as potash, lime, & flourishing in Paris; the expenses for iii: firing, an roduce in destroying the ana wien" eed-corn is dressed with and a re qui ite as s much, if not more; — sae don, Jeg those eames, was supposed to be owing to their forming a q' a price part of | Scapy compoun with the oil of ys i which is ome more the Puts growers havi t: little spiel har tmnall gar easily ‘etached from eon surface o: orn, to which its natural ~ | greasii makes it adhere. dens, of about an acre of eae: upon this are erected on€ | " The Smut, or Dust-brand (Uredo segetum), di e last or more span-roofed houses, about ten feet — aeaeae _ bey ‘its ant Ne vee —_ in ‘ccaping throug’ — sides of the infected grain e of a sooty powder. on the ground, and just fi igh e ns ar > roi *i ee rin rarely a ks wheat, but ii : mon enemy of oats and barley. n the middie ; some few are heated wii water. | The usual palliative of this evil is steeping, as in the case of These, together with frames sunk in the earth, are found | the . Henslow advised, however, that many ne’ : B' lItiplicati e uid be tried upon this subject, and he suggested answer the purposes of The th Ge caieyice tiem take = He. i } winter covering is paillassons (straw seats) ‘al leaves ; reccmamendel fis peacticn of raising seed. cora poe, tite the and plants thus excluded from li ght, air, or fire-heat, neral sary one of the probable means of securing preserved for o r two mo in a perfectly healthy — y, a me eee! ced. : # ust (Uredv rubigo) was deseribe orange powder exuding pares x Peat is used od tayo everything,—roses Pex: rom the inner chaffscales, and forming yellow or pads wn spots » geraniums, Fuchslas, ver Sy -—and it} and blotches on vario rts of corn-plants. In itself it is a answers the purpose by insuring a d st of comparatively small importance; b fessor Hen- flow made the very curious discovery that it is the gsc a the Mildew, the Puccinia gramin rie, which is so The we, has been severe for the last three weeks, as you will — by the a retarn :— Dec. fy Ora AM. ‘Ther 4° ge a ee ae 3 A heavy fall of snow ; 7 : ESE, { "ihe dst this winter. is — — «me — EASE. . 19 o— — 2039 — S§.E. Rainand sleet. 20 — — 253 — &£ Much snow. PROCEEDINGS OF SE ABTIES. HORTICULTURAL SOCIE Dec. 1.—H. Moreton Dyer, heer Pe -P., in iy Chair. Sir Frede- rick Poliock and George Bai were elected. Among the petalum Mackaianum Pica OF poe ts ‘gol garded as a-mons' of the grain of rye, produced 2% the external actio' ofa minute fungus, which causes ito e action of ergo corn to be highly gear both to man and deed, preferred s _ to feeding spon when which had been fel with ergot mixed acon anda noble plant of the old £pi- The latter, although its rata ae hae was, f health. of th fro} the beautiful state alth, interesting objects in the room silver Knightian siete ons assigned to these plants.—A set pgstie — wee r. Jackson, of Kingston, gained a Ba medal. these re silver nksi ong wel E. caffra, hiemalis, hae Seban, pyreinidals, and carinata, all in fine ———— Mr. Gree! of the best December Cucumbe ver saw, a in moar He and thelr rit was acknowledged the a a medal. Hes al iso exhibited pee, aap Epiphylium —— Begonia octopetaia, and a new seedling Cineraria bear cae themums were in the in from Mr. Edmunds, Guia the Duke of De vonshire at Chiswick, Messrs. Chandler, and the garden of bert contributed inde th farm at Lodsworth ; Bullock's Heart, the Large July, the Early Champion, and the Pheasant’s Eye, were said to be most prolific. There were also Som er ~ Gai of Batterse: pears from thes: es on his tadle on Christmas-day. There were also various fr f Cacti from and a Phaius grandi- Jolius, from Mr. Moore, gardene: R. , Esq., of Stamford Hill. ordin imen. was meed of 2 iaurel-root which had penetrated an old bape or aeons Isaac api diag of Bush- _ ioe — It amass ble number, the Saeeeiee state- pear rar made:—The Jean de Witte Pear, fruited = = for the first time, is very like a Glout-morceau; bears w in France. case, in the parish register “Of “Wattisham, x sue in Suffolk, occu red in 1762, —_— as it was thought, in cons ad alamity was referred by "the Professor, with great A. to the eae n of ergot, which he finds a Kod of the Rev: d of! ghbourhood par a re Tritici, which te ia cong on s small scale. They fo: a cottony the which, when the latter is and, will an cloth, but remain behind in the no. aout h this. creat is Opically small when young, it is a gia rs — , becoming a quarter of an inch Fadl Nev er had hoger gomoto ig 50,000 of the geod might be canals rag pat Eas 9 Sealdin ing water entioned as the edy for these creatures. the Wheat- midge (Cecidemyia Tritici) millions of millions of which is, therefore; re, reason Ppo: the thresher up to that season = earl burnt, thi wheat-midges might i n time be annihilated. ecture an exhibition kind that have yet been made, the microscope anything better than the shadow WS, OF ins r ghi malic NICAL ‘SOCIETY OF EDINBURGH. . for the. fon of an of of specim ong the members. pitt saree token sheniame distinct species. ee ree aa, 1. Dr R, Kaye Greville, ie fn pc hor eh ppredet . R. Kay’ President, in the chair. production of Messrs A valuable and elegant volume, the joint lasgow, was presented G. J. Lyon and Wm, Gourlie, Junior, of G by these genti ritish Mosses tice, with the exception of six, viz., Jungermannia lanceolata, Linn. ; J. cuneifulia, Hook. ; Marchan- oa levis, Hook.; Glyphomitrion cylindraceum, Taylor ; Funaria n. mens were presented. Amongst the lat pty pre Keith Murray, o of Ochtertyre, was pention for the admirable manner in which the specimens | were preserv: e following communications were then "Notice by Mr. Robt. Ball, of Dublin, ot a a singular deposition or some Levee poner yes yaa =s a of snow in miniature, in one of his and the eculiar mode of hybernation of Pin; nguicu andifior 2. Mr. Edward Forbes exhibited a beautiful species * Mucor, onths in a damp cellar. The filam silky. looking hair, between three and sour | ieches long, many of sm. being peeaney tipped ja bright yellow thece. Dr. ed that many Lg ago he had seen a =. tote iry appearance anogh. as far as Souetaberek: destitute of the be wth black spots on the present His friend Mr. Robert Cha and himself had both tne fongus =p the pee It was grown tch, and rkby. Lonsdale, Westmoreland, with a catalogue of the plants found in that neighbourhood. By = ete rrid herd of Bury, Lancashire an excursion to the Clova Mountains in August of s d from the circum: of comparatively rare orn same period of the year, late Mr. Don’s discoveri a re! he found by Mr. Thos. Edmondston, Jun., on a barren of os Shetland Islands; and that Orodus niger had bee’ by Scotland; also a specimen of ea as, ted presser tote from the Braid Hills being an a addition to the Flora Edinburgh. Mr. Campbell stated tha tense Vicia lutea had been pvcerd the Hon. in Devonshire in July three mosses collected, cordata, ‘a R. Rollo near Auc! 7. Notice of observed seventy-t! Listera ‘entrionale, and we een ~ saad were particu- by Mr. N. B. Ward, Pteris crispa, Asplenium gon larly noticed as being additions to the ra of the north of Devon. Mr. Brand exhibited proofs of the tables and maps which are in course of being ‘printed and be er for the purpose of | pr yo acer geographical distribution of plants Su and Neath Hortieu —The An- nual ‘Mee ox ay —Owing to the esting uh of the weather few plants wae exhibited, but the necessary business of the year was trans. acted. nw liural paras La 10. unity of exiting to each other any of the pr ane pective ;—to excite a feeling of yroees of baad neighbourhood ; (an r. Di an, ine! aS prize ip" : Bree naar: ree ; Liewelyn F id presen’ y the President, year in oe eaaanoer of i D. elyn The “Silver Horticultural als, number of prizes obtained in the year, in the several departm: of flowers, fruit, and vegetables, are due to Mr. D. Liewelyn for flowers; Mr. Vivian for fruit; ditto for vegetables. : ‘ Prizes given by the : President for the best Bouquets were 2’ ded at the shows to Mrs. Arthur Jones ; atthe second show, to Mr3. Webber. desserts were awarded at the firet show second and third, to Mr, Virian; and first and second show , to to their arf in te ai an | Hine pe ee 6. THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. a 1, = inhabitants of the town, of the want of which great incon- Ecmzveata tunipa. (Greenhouse Succulent).—This plant is ence had been felt. Both there pes aers joa been te 4 attained | mene Hy apd similar to E. opp bean * like that species = very extensive cultivation of vegetables has arisen with the : patch, in the patna quently an abundant and daily ures 2, of fre tabi & "ae | \ ots a house tect "Tt aigers Score. r* haviog longer = el town is within every one’s reach. to t substantial | biont leaves, which are dee with dall pa benefits, we now see cottage @ eulti with taste; creepers | flowers a rich gteenbouse pere no Ry neatly trained against the di igs; and, im many instances, | requiring t the e ¢ various es of Fig comfort no where formerly mis need time, to say the | Marygolds and emailer Crassuias ; that is, it shoal reg wept 4 least, gare no return. On this snbject uteresting report has ' al ed, and - be , a mixture of jeaf-m the pot with « rdens, and adjudged the prizes as follows :—For the i Register. tivated cottage garden: fi creepers and roses T aeaemene VASCICULATA. (Greenhouse Undershrub.)—A hand- against a cottage : forbees: for and apple trees planted by | some shrabby “thrift,” forming a pretty bush, with long stiff acottager, Extra prizes of too! peed by ere by the 4 re | leaves like those of & pine, is mot uncommon in the dens n dent, Mr. J. H. Vivian, to cottagers fo: d fi London, under the name of Armeria seabra, and with the reputa- best basket of ve; tes. ae tion of a Cape plant. This species is really a mative of Corsica, e Visiting Committee cannot conclade remarks with- | near asd of Portugal, and is the Statice lusitanica at expressing their regret, that they have A not in their power | fruticosa maritima megno fore of Tournefort’s Institutions. It is to award the prizes to the labourers who have worked the greatest | worth ue ¥ 88 a rock plant, bat it —_ pro- number of pose én inthe ones Soni, no wean having sent in | tection in the win car adiens -~ Botanical Register. a claim.—( Abridged from the Sabrion Ste beet cee NOTICES OF NEW PLANTS WHICH ARE EITHER USEFUL OR ORNAMENTAL. M are ANROUE. 5 ieturesque E, —The hoar-frost that eurred near London on wg or me its pttm ractomate (Orckidec itowe Epiphyte.}—The usual | of Brazil, tooulleg wi with plants of beautiful form, rich beautiful effects upon the foliage of evergreens and the | colour, and singular st: ure, have farnished this, the hand- oe the perfect stillness of the | somest of the yellow Oncidiame. It was im ed from Rio air on the suc rendered th e appearance. id. Tees a soil in “aee our nal are growing wi mn te rob- at pe all art matter upon which they * ye weeping up a th for restore to it nothing except in co their om ¥ In natural state of things where upd F gqrocupld ‘decay, and ot incor with the soil, their soluble or decompo ate ich the the that occupy it. ‘at ‘ e case of cutti | prasings as they cannot be very well dug in, the _ wa’ Bf Graig em, their ashes over the ground. By this ous and watery yaaa: onli are driven off, ai gase Ae alt an (> ~ whic “h the ~ godin may have | abstracted i in the formation of i ing re of vegetation h and every sinister prophecy two In wean, and we are pendulous, not erect. The | is expected to leave da: Amo Lee's, Hammersmith.—Gesneria elongata has been exhibiting species mt from beg re Ma and flowered in the ho accom it are Dr. Theodor Vogel, | its beautifal cr: ane Se nea great ang oe The Peg te Casanravs caAaweve, or . ‘Green. | % learned German tires, “end Mr. Ansell, a been in this country for the last fire years, is a! nt 4 feet 7% Beergreen Cinsery-—¥ le WOW aote yore ties tals mean from the Garden of the Horticultural Society The Eondon m to mgd lg Bg n-th yy perve th sername ar ty from Norfotk Island, voy od Se ttention of both will be especially recently appeared, which are deserving of cultivation; ba’ — ee pi Ape ~yeton ikon ite © accu 4 yf ly to 3 collation of dried ts | living | no none of them are superior » a = colour or habit to the two the Plora of — of plants, “het to the examination of the on cat niger ct ane described by Dr. “prey im his Prodronvas Norfolk Island : a sty tie ii as regards —— and cranes ites horticultural objec ects, to the nature of its elimate and soil id to vario ertained that foi phd. ve ne it was id to , is Cer. jes weil worthy of cultivation, "Tew real’ characte: may expect the ber tet pene truly Stated thas ithe fllowing extract of . oe ‘tas a figationa rc Dr. Vogel and hime whose mperialis, — x let tour h from Mr. Pince, ef Exeter, in Lage dine — i vegetable pred vg A janes. “sono od bemanee of Ooms :* is to be | It t singula species, ef tiest, foot a | Harrisii, excep it is Fuchsia, between r. tagens and F. Dickso habit of F. fulgens. n interesting specimen ne F. tage, e feet high, grafted upon a fine straight ica, is aaa ee —Dee. 19. Loddiges’, Hackney.—B ola no fewer than seventeen spikes of atona asanaa g four Seana to each —_ is suspended trom pie roof of the Orchidaceow: flowers are hang em of F oh Age pie hoped that the Napoleona im basket from si: og ug ae le Ea Moniliforme has abont ei rt “me. Serene seeders te hemes of covered with & 4 baa tree, hie h ne bee pon ‘su all of which are fully ex ed. s bo of fi nd hs wien enon ra i banches bf hitherto found by Palisot de Beauvois, in the petty king- the most beautiful of the Dendrobia, a 0 orehidaceous plants eee tome § ae — e Panag . contrib: more to the f the stove at this or any other time ortwo longer. I think it was at first over. ee on dom e Waree, will reward their toil. yap ene — of the: pens than te picnic grees. Dencrotiall poumenana hen creeper ; ae bole Bes frely of i by ois it proven v very were conte ¢ to our gardens, it wou nobile, another handsome species, has pe of a delicate white fone of the pillars of oar Camelia house beg mene the expedition in oe Sere saute at the base, witha light purple shade passing gradually to the oliage.”—Botanical Regi tes anor ovenrens meat — oY other fine things will, however, we doubt points, where it becomes dark ; and the lip is marked with a deep Mearhina PRAG scene Hat ‘ha: with . penn of the same colour in the centre. Saccolabium compres- t plant, with - ie purple fowers. itis aid to be | ie be ag a to hear that Mr. hn another valuable acquisition cut forty flower ofepiphytes. a Mexi lant, from e Real Vine.— pen earns Te has upon ¢! wut for’ wers, W are bar. Marnects, of th tadeery, ry, Hackney, f sa Oueeaied cael tne er cunts press a complete account tof his method of coiling | entirely white, exe except theimner surface of ¢ Pe he petals, and they are memoranda concerning it:—“ I wanear plant about =~ . | the Vine, and caltratiog itin pots. The work will, we b aagee myer a eg a= gag r pe gy A Bpide saat gs height. ‘The ma a bade in bloom, and upwards of a foot in | understand, form 90 = nos bag bad about 500 dowers upon it. Epidendram Skinneri, a mest — — wine oie Trane Gon cpenieg, =_ Dro; | Royal Society ing on the 24th Dec. of the | beautifal species with large crimson flowers, ranking aneied a nen prticed ened from the | Committee of Doting: and Vegetable Physiology, Pr Frets first ct of moss extensive genus, is macy ge 4 . great luxuriance in 4. extremity, sending forth lateral iT oppasiee Sevnchee’ Th mi wen et = om sacra tlgger rapa eared Lindley and Dr. Royle were re-ap e ondanial ae epiphyte, se delightfully ingund flowers the plant continued to grow, and in a pot of light rich secretary for the ensuing year of te most de delicate white.—Dec. 2 attained the height of three feet, at the same extent in g ‘i Sasticesod plans inde @ance hone, whicitioculdiy diameter. It was sent to me from a d can : The Marie-Louise Pear.—Mr. a Crace, of St. | | Rollisson’s, Tooting.—A plant is ee eas cael hundred miles, and was much injured by ‘the oareey 4 Bova John’s Wood, was able to wasn, Marie- Loaise pears in beg ato une Lenape sa madmaniod — herefore, be fairty inf at, more favourable circum. | ion upon Christmas-day, by the method of'| nificently in flower inthe Orchidaceous House. Ith grow It in a euparior tee ee fais eutection. To } them oped at the last piper of the Hor- | five of which have three flowers each pon them, very fine in eater ere t iret placed in the stove, but the tam. | Scaltura (See report of the proceedings in this | Pos soles, © py ture —— high for Sanuk came ook ie ved | day’s paper.) eens , with several other species, as R. campanulitum and , aod rem night and - . mana the Borders of Shrubberies—In performing » both of which are considered perfectly hardy; out the sammer.”’— Botanic er. gardene of species — con Pimetwa srectant ( Shrub.)\—This, ae of the this © precios with vei oe yer the leaves of to the severity of the” eather hile cont of very prettiestofgreen house shru as been raised in Ll th k fi a pana se nee le borne 18? pose ar =a iety, from S River seeds. ihhespienaen -ass pla ts, cn to remove the prunings of bushes. The teeny crepe peer: ~ per ere mos por. ees ea n fo Sora large pt «Pony aT ns fingers are difficult t to dig in, » and the former are | perhaps — meg wth andswe —- ayy os —_ — red with crimson.— Hotanic: ter ; it commas dary tenon en “ge INPATEENS noSKA. (Tender dneual Aw indian pecies of this ey are removed from the — where wiht) ““sqanoinaaaeanees Pontey’: ipandibcetnenete ew pete pec ty cat Which were re presented to the Horti- | originally produced. Now, if a io hig ge he con- beating ~ Scaetneee i the eos ‘eo sonst shecies mgr planar Tels ioaleg lurt. of Directors of the East India ive the most injurious bas of pace hrubbery, | com er admirably. From the beens oe ale rose-coloured flowers, * Somer taewat water eset rs ces open gutter, he Mcrae of slabs of siate, Which are arranged along the st is is just the =e have hit w eo I think io water § € the stem, and when gathered and placed | pon, Gointed very neatly together.) to the further end of the house, petmsratan sitting-room, it will. continue them for | = be apparen consideration. eratry a from which mp it returns in a four-ineh irom pipe Bermaces se or heey ee Register. | young beite & are ae stitine aly a plant partly from bottom e boiler. From hevieg the gutter open they have @ —Very different from pyralatngregeslan fa ee rie ter absorbed from the atmosp toni Moment, but it speneneses _ of slate covers _—_ a € erect branched stem, deep ane el | degree from soluble s etcapiaig ath attracted from the S0ik | Ssameen anne caine The si spaiar sipaiuten ie tee pate at of [opal em agicecy Grows from tofour feet high, and | Lt the roots. The earth only contai Mr. Thomas Conbett, Mate Saieamne ts De. Pontoy, gardener summer. t ine Sowers Oring. of te | tion of — ‘matter, alarge part of which is potash ean ce up the - a a mecession old grape-vines cf hothouse ; would succeed very weil nna 4 flower freely if i plsntes a eee Il that th b a5 | gro fn rebar fen erent ge , patron eme 3 but the severity of the is to ae roe to aie contained, or what may be ime rabbis form Od buildings treched into and m rp P rigin il treated is mintom, Would prove fatal to it, seme | Bio gre the soil of the borter, the bottom of which was at the same time grows wet te camer. it must be taken up and. pr Tt it by man. Now, if we bgt 8 colar away | San avaiasds- “ue Object of tiie was tsubee che Sunaed Mal tinge, Befamionl Henee? Sl and. strives vesdliy: fom cum, these. nutritious the form of porous and open for the roots torun in. The vines were takes, oteamicel Hewiater. : prunings, and never add anything to the soil by manao-~ ‘up and drawn out of the house, and laid. border, ant a i en th in — a Se en s Jan. 2.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. < covered over with earth about six inches (this was done about manure? Until pay points are satisfactorily determined, | contain an invariable eat of alkaline bases. 4. fourt onths scott In the beginning of July last, when the qi —p. rine yon began to root from the stems laid in the border, they grew | | 41 yoaee of the physiol eye The sh agin For these reasons alkalies bes ust be considered with the scr and have in one season le fine ood to the 5 nell gag 4 Ss £ cultivator and the physio- ‘ k again to give them the | chemist. ae! qeoniions and in order to attain this ane a commence- ent p must be made. ~ =a e ina Whe g pt indi- 94 . The proportion of alkaline bases oxen te the i ma of ashes they yield. The quantity of ashes obtained from the same Papen Bh of vegetable matter varies constantly j in different spec’ Therefo and “consequently different Species demand a different 104, 1 They onl undoubtedly have a larges weeny h here by the spri ing. = ~_ advantageous manner, certain quali ties, or mn Dec. i er re um size, in certain parts o! of organs of "particular pthaits. sesh oe is object by the a lication ‘Rebiewws. of thos substasces swhich oa it: to Agri the e development of of these rons or r organs, or by supplying ms so chats iY. ne chon Liebig, M.D. eer tee fg the con ecessary to the production of the qualities kane. syle, Ph. D. 8v0. a ame Taylor and Wal- | desired. Phas. The work now ‘wader review is partly chemical, partly | be practical ; but the two eetirad are it agro so muclt 6. The perfect i rio ee a ‘plant re dependant on the presence of aiken or alkaline matter; . hen these Snetaniteh are totally wanting, growth will rieatad’s and when poecs | are deficient, it must be im- bag in proportion. —Pp- 164. vegetable physlors has bag ete since attracted the a tion of philosophe! — om them to apply the en to | the other. ae We hav seen. the results the saesectiaik e att fth cj besides alkalies are required to especially which concern "ti st operations of is te Wal’ * fD 52 2 —) show in what way the | science “Of 5 , chemistry anpain them. pear knowles of the pomen of growth in Pade as far patie were at that time unde rstood. Ata later In laying before our readers the views of the author we shall not exactly fo follow the — of 7 en in his book, in de Sst the |b ssarily tain the life of Piast 153. Phosphoric acid has 54; ‘nd common , sulphate of potash, nitre, corde of omar By othe er matters, may el cma essary constituents of several plants.—p. “18. son t is ind! ve come that every sn should find in the soil it is eninge ree we f his facts uch improvement.” What we propose to mg! is, fir rstly, to state Ai s vie ews in the form of genéral propositions, and | readers a seine that they y should find i in wthelt food the phos hapa of of lime and magnesia, which harden yy most directly upon i h less than. mi vy n from any want of skill on the part mists is aiete attention has been directed to acah } Mig pin nor from their deficiency in pra pssiy: al Professo r Liebig divides his wet into two parts 5 “As t ese propositions include all the most important’ — of Professor Lichi's views, so far as practical utrition of oe veputablaes? and may be regarded as cesses of fermentation, putrefaction, and decay,” and has less relation si L aiesida . We shall chiefly occupy meen with ced ier o their simplest form, the views of dening and Facing for Davy at least had vantage of the best * eens t England could afford. ie has rather of ob til lately the com- functi itself; for u functions of vegetable ‘life were understood in very ii mperfect manner. The constituent elements of sews are compounds of and h nitrogen, and organic acids, generally combined with inor rs anic bases.—p. 3. 2. Carbon is obtained by won are in the form of carbonic y ex: | essen- | ° tially practical; the second slates to ‘* “the chemical pe wea the euthor ‘may be reduced to the following eighteen propo- | rte t | is supported, and the explanations it affords | phenomena, or the rules of cultivation. A ioe Botanical Dict comprising the names, and culture ve all all pete known in Britain ; | with a fal explanation ¥! ere terms. By Jo oseph F.L.S. 8vo. Tus is a very rem remarkable ngetiy In the space of 354 | small 8vo pages it comprehends the most complete cata- f hand: pansies us or Until ieieaene and Col n ascertained the eae in the aci + P some garden plants; and there- year 1 soil by the decay of veget p. 32. fore literally forms a pocket-book for the amateur and Tecakionait water ; but it was thought that the e oxygen 3. Under fi fl ary d moi This has been effected nel ment of rt: lants absorb carbonic acid, and | a very small, a ak beautifully by the exclusively from the decomposition o of hae acid gas. omission of all those r ony are never = id the kn iftey of nitrogen being a necessary eleme Se ep cna a decomposition ae seen nam art such as grasses, umbellife is assimilated along with peers acid, while the the like. "The arran arrangement is alphal ,in f Boussingault, See and Rigg, ” | oxygen 0} of the water is liberated.— —p. 6 tself no > aia convenience ; for who wants to co a of wach were ‘emnonhou in 1838, can ha rdly be said t be hat pat this t exist y part of SES saamie his collection he is desirous of filling a Bo de S and Chev ralier. Yet th Lae structure. p- 69. additi a catalogue, ti d the necessity of nitrogen in cxabig 6. Nit ly be obtai y plants in the form | the colour Of ‘the flowers ‘exerted f The nitrogen of the ay Hie sh cannot be | species with a short a eco of the habits of trad the whole foundation 4 of feegeable physiology. the source Sar sapptye Socssiee-it it cannot be made to enter | genus, ar the © origin of i _ Besides all this, d at, that, with these important | into com mbination with | any element except 0 wit x ed f its es in their cence of vegetable functions, Sir pl pstlablee f Hebe Davy and his followers d n | —p. 70. w to anges them. By this mean prosacs imei ‘the nature of the corinexion between 7. Ammonia exists in every part of pene, 5 in the roots, ee mislead t serie, es pA avoided, aoa ‘the sca chemistry and the details of practice. Hence ai tobe thelr | in the eae sna lag mes and fruits in an unripe | of © pronunciation to the being and uncertainty | regarding the effect, of fallowing, condition —P- 80. It i pnpplied : Pe in-wa' er, wh h PE rning, &c. 3 their inabilit, t i it is suspended, in | history pi y other th f f the p ti animal a table Leip . f ab 0 is ee nen atnane with- | The Farmers Aieianad wil “and Calendar for 1841. By of tl e expression “ aie satires which tats assumed | out exception, the nitro, which enters into the com- C. W. Johnston and W. Shaw. Ridgway. to te the nutritious part of manure: position of thei i . 71—77. THE almanacs for the farmer. ‘Independ- n ae peaotrcd of the ammonia w whi lis with | ently of the ordinary co’ such books, it con- of or, organic chemi: istry to sea oy one bat ‘the most | with the water; but another portion | tains a fund of useful omg relating more particeu~ learned chemists of the > present day, is calculated to 0 excite \is is taken n up sey de pols of nr and, entering into new | larly to tural An ample calendar of work mbinations, produces all umen, » gluten Ba number ao pant in each months of fairs, clubs, m ; ‘ Se farming ; for t of other p- 77. rn-duties. taxes, agricultural laws, and the rales. t, that if the practice of an celine and asks 9, But it i is not 20 much the itity of f c ting the s to be rapi y improved must be by a is imp he ry of mona he oeten_togety wi ol measuring and ae 7 princip p hich well-k ae 3 meses tates it is in great measure | land, form the prominent features of the work. Tn ad- Valuable operations depend for their success. i cone | leak peloge it bes. be be imbibed. ed, in the state on, there i 4 ormation relat- the words of Professor Liebi of salts, its volatility is overcome, and not the smallest | ing to the theory of concerning which we “The development of the ‘stem, leaves, blossoms, and | portion of the ammonia is lost to the plants, for it is all | shall probably have some observations to offer hereafter fruit of plants is dependent on certain conditions, . p. 86. The price at which it is sold is so small as to place dg Parse 1 the reach of *s labourer who nts as well as on their boner w. 1840. No. LX. the " Bat what does the soil contain, | not produce, more Saree aeenanen the substances used as scids than Se Taipan ote eh we aie withades aepenation of 12. Hence carbonic acid, water, and ammonia, contain | — for the support et Certain inorganic consti! e ass fe e existence, plant mast the Horticultural Soiety of Landon Pa * 8 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [N° in depth with old bricks and stones, on which w: foo lad three inches of lime rabbis h, out of which all — particles had latter w: si of heath soil; y,a The pruni ing. knife had be oo seers spp | pe othe yous mood previous to removal, mo. and. finall erect was swept — all the ole ve € of the last fruit is gathered the rg is completely | battered with water g nd the house ft ith a thermometer of id to 95° of sunheat when n be obtained ; course is nite in oni the leaves turn colour, when ene —Prepare horse droppings for spring-made le beds, According to ‘o the yin resources of eos gardener, and — peg one ath the follo ‘atio: be proceeded = time this month :-— ow on slight hot-beds short-top radish, mustard, ‘on earrot, for Seine nate in May ; sow in boxes, » peas, a ° at three to the afternoon. By the ane wood is acts ripened, and in runing cu like oak than i ach-wood. During all "he ripening ae the bso mete the house is allowed t dry ; ater entirely withheld fro pode author has had it as high as o’cloc lk in most co! i “the. moment the erceived co) ry 1 ld towards Aas ge The author Beit by ad ile aie ood ocr pein sor in cases of stro: ong necessity. The tree once placed in its situation, vad fibre of bos root Was as careful lly trained as _ the shoots, care ach-tree have never LJ 1, t the front arches, into the ou mide border. In the first week of February the tree was dressed all over with a mixture of soft soa into ing ‘were coated o aint, f Fe cbraary but the heat for the first betncet does not a 50° by day and << by n ight. The house is steamed i th with the antud watape of the flow me, and during the ripening of the fruit. After the hae are set the heat is increased slowly, and for r eks is about 60° ih fort and is allowed t , for the lights of his pea planted.” SUMMARY. and the heat, kidney-bean onions ; plant pieton a sete ferme rhubarb, lettuce, “atragon, and mint. If you a ve room ig houses or pits, take a few strawberries of eith r the Groy End Scarlet or acer Seedlin ng. ut-Door and Orchard ee owas n frosty weather, wheel man ground, prepare | composts. A —If not secured from frost before, this should not be Bap toca te up the stems with straw ~ orn van fend them up aie hom 2 or otherwise mulch with litter and as far as the oe pars gee Pla: ee early Mazagan a warm situation for trans. oons.—Continue to protect carefully from frost. eats shee —Continue to protect in bad weather; gather off we mci and slugs. y.—If the weather is likely to remain severe covera ae rows with dry fern or litter. ‘ a ivE.—Tie up to blanch in fine dry days ; protect in severe ros! Letruce.—Protect from bad weather, but expose freely at all £. S & & other os es. Peas.—Sow Early frame or Char situation ; for sich it has been catallsbed. Riod readers may ae hb all s being worked o ine extent of our ineans: tio aetien a ee an of altering on Gardens, and for the regulations of the Exhibitions in ig ie rde the Horticataral Society, we refer to tw i draw a hittle earth ie hemes prey “op 3 pair ‘ieaiae severe wea. ther occur, protect them h fir | branches or dry litter. _Oacuarp.—Pre; was 38° a = big eee ut eight dozen poe in ns umm which it was planted, and during that, with t the pam seven | The important subject of British Oak is onthe = _ a contributor - who — himself ‘‘ Jael,” fro we aren have many more comm munications pre LOWER GA ARDEN AND SHRUBBERY. r De; pA grisea Sroves. cat e otcbidaheds plants as Ty encugh for rem Bog-moss (Sphagnum) will be found the best ma- Made as : i a rod t le 2,4 0 euedt2 a _fine fruit the pots, as S$ » for which peat must be used; gi a am i - P i ea" ? orre: de meutiind some interesting eve seo to °|"G ater in loa cete ‘0 the Apccd of As habe er. ee . REEN-HOUS cee ¢, and make fires onl ll tree se Presidency, especially w: nae rd t v sou in frosty or very wet at ES n Dece: neha ane was tek = See ce oo ite fu from which Indigo may be ned for comme aaitil ur- ae ND S paterrase a. rs aon Carestions, Dien ot Stocks, z . and all similar plants in Sanck, shou ave plenty of air given aw excellent wood, covering oes : a . eave of 48 poses ; and in the Pi ri oa vill be found some useful pearey cays, Dut water ‘aparingly sak alee ways in the diate feet. The author next. proceeded to soon information concerning er flower-market of that | Seeds of Balsams, Cockscombs, and 0 other tender foe management of the , a3 pr sae at Oul capital. I R ai s flowering in the greenhouse, may W 5 pete Pr) Roses, Park.. He regards draining of the greatest importan: ee eg Pinks, Persian-Lilac, bulbs, and Sent suitable B Renta fos liaties and also that the soil should not be too rich. A | he which is y pe is if a 7, las io * ou | refer our — to dings of the Horticultural Eneaniiiem éxy 1aspeely tie Seascn, fy sekin: pale fat ee ints. of the roots without hesitation, taking care “apogiiow. Proceedings protect young plants of Arbutus, Cypress, hy brid Rhododen- Bs ay em in uperfi 10 | Society, i whi ch iti is publish ed.——So rac . nS, and germinating seeds from severe frost ; also any new luxuria: This root- cutting system he ursued for | fact: Memoranda, particularly cabal Oak, Fir, or forest trees, whose ness may be A jou seven years at least, and finds it eve bing that can be | with regard to to Pontey’s Nursery at Plymouth. e | st AND Corrick Woop.—Trench and drain ground in- winter pruning he thins his young wood to a | i H baand Sr paniieg. Pit those places where draining is eee prs , Br rt P go sat y pry dees and manner in which Mr. Paxton intends to man rs sary. Prune and thin Firand Larch—nurse plantations which great extent, * cane h Weekly Calendar will be apparent from the specimen now | have been growing e! ight or nine years; take care to cut elean to Tenses of the ahoeth jateedet He Po vBeat yeas erp, pives———"he ‘Mutecrologiesl Notices ‘te. explain the fol, sp not mows Gees Seales af barwbaetinan iiss renders the ump and well-ripened. Afte the pl hich they are to be drawn up. We give, in ch forest-trees as are injured by the nurses, ai move any wicaiie praning, he immediately stops every wound, Bs the first place, the fet: | her j i d ee rs Pec ree me a = id size. oe ! * iF ie of deciduous trees for the form Joppices may be pro- ther fom pruning o: r from accident, with a coat of thick | 2nd, aged the facts as to the average = ne near | ceeded with, if the weather be favourable and the groand dry, white p: int 5 ; this is repeated o n all the la wounds, | Lon atl the last fifteen years in the week about to fol- | but in low wet situations it is better to defer it to a later period. Ty, ly ae bie pics will, a believe, ts found of mite prc and Attention ought to be paid to the proper thinning or weeding of ; ch Coppices as require it. The kest shoots should be with sates ea with sawdust, and. burnt in shallow | yalue tha cleared away from the stools, and a limited number only left to pans; and he afterwards dresses the tree two or th — me to maturity according to their size and strength. It is de- times with soft soap, sulphur, and tobacco-water, brushing WEEKLY CALENDAR OF OPERATIONS sirable, however, not to expose n too much at once, as it ‘ P . — = nee co = a danger is to be ap- it carefully into every bu crevice with a pai For the ensuing Week. Grimeadead icc exposed. citnations: as Gaal brush; this mixtureis not made ng as recommended of the pleasure ied nearly all the satisfaction to | not eineine 3 at ae eet Selling 1 octeaed with if good timber p by some gandnaing. authors, as Mr. Bimeton depends om a garden, at this season, depends upon | is desired instead of bark. Joseph Paxton, Chatsworth. uch on the care al benching 2 and flooding every part of | a strict attention on the pat of the gardener to neatnes ENTOMOLOGICAL NOTICES. the t ‘Th a lean! i department; and a s this, in the (Under this head it is our intention briefly to describe the injuriol’ effects in forcing if the gardener preserves jority of cases, requires attention pare than mu od teas cipal insects injrioas to the en = pee high tem monte at phen he had shad his ‘thermometer | aitional labour, we hope the importance we attach to hele snow encountering their attacks.] . di y be felt by our readers. The gardener will do well +3 goreians with the determination of finding fault with im: necessity, for in his anxie' Ss get fruit en pene: he ae himself (not w ith his men n) 5 he will oft ften discover that probably have kept it to nearly 50° could he have obtasned | this i that heat; but he mvinced that it would pit — if it connate from his employer. The of worse for . From the period that p y dude, tat begin to swell off until they commence ai ig, th bab] in cold dull weather, he is a li-tle ni water, taking care especially t if syringes in the afternoon, it is d arly, so as to have the lea by the evening ; for a temperature of 34° to 40° The young wood receives utmost pases through all the growing period ; pbc robber i the finger and thumb as = as it is pring fone eyes ng: every su perfluous shoot that is not wanted for the next year’s bearing is taken soot and all the inferior shoots, which are much below the proper rength, are trained wing p — as nearly e sapi einolar as aang in order to dec $3093 author perceiy 0 ze | ge | e theo | he keeps fe re — first crop; delay principal trees to the end of the as —The ve observations apply equally to this fruit. gro ee Guceusees. a dang is used for these plants sweeten it | Seecr turnings ; collect tree leaves to mix with it; and ae wc a ion for c encing : the latter end of The young eae las now much leisure-time ; let us impress upon his mind its oe for i improvement and study. I—KITCHEN GARDEN AND ORCHARD. rarscap reader coven Fore ariment, Prvgry.—If the tan beds have become cool great nm must be bcm in beg ts for very Tittle + water in cane ri cane will ce | will y the roots. ¥ pope to be much bone tering the a damp atmosphere in the house by frequent syri! nging. Ps Hocse.—Give pe hinthoyidon of airduring the day, keeping ntle fires at the same time, so dont — or no fire may be re. qaiaite at — a in vi rare eather. Cuerey Ho Gentle potas on 2 w be lig! expel damp, previous to Torcing: Lage in tenes should a gata bed to pnaneat that used last month ; on Pox draw off Tao a to allow the buds to acquire their | tre in nurseries. ry _—_ of The year it is agro in a torpid state under ground gene: the roots of plants, in the form of a large white fleshy era ag 5 a brownish bea “farnished with large jaws, and having six legs th th n i Se: a ine up and destroying these pests a per hun State of sre Weather near London for the Week ending Decem- ber 31, 1940, as brea gs at the Garden of the Horticultural Society, Chiswic a THERMOMETER, | Wind. | Rain. Dec. | M || Max.) Min. )M Friday 25 | 30. 368 anata 28 15 E. Satur. 26 | 30-595) 30.5 31 27 N. Sund. 27 | 30.644 30.882! 33 | 29 NE. Mond. 28 | 30.400! 30.275) 32 | Is E. Tuesd.29 | 30.306) 30.249; 36 19 Ww. Wedn, 30 | 30.412, 30,164 31 Ww. 16 Urs. 31 | 29.990; 99.873) 45 35 0} NW. rage | 30.387/30.979' 95 | 24.8 29.9 0.16 Severe frost, foggy ; dense fog, with intense frost at t night. 26. Hoar frost, accumulating much on branches; hazy. 27. Overcast; a 23. Baye eee rude cee ee caste, 29. Foggy; change of west; clear cual 30. Clear in the morning; cloudy at noon ; heavy rain 31. Cloudy; fine, with sunshine ; evening clear and calm. — JAN. 2.] Se eee ee THE be RDENERS’ CHRONICLE. State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 15 Years for the ensuing Week ending oe 9, 1841. uld appear oe or those ofa a person ignorant of that which he ought to kno . Hei is SENASETROT SA NANG SRE TEN EE AEE NEWS OF THE WEEK. - 2 z\2 5) &= |_No. Prevailing Wind: na INTER, Grumio tells us, ‘‘tames man, woman, and £5/28| EE | Weil (ea). ae little do the wisest pease know! ope that t es teenie beast :’’ but he spoke of ordinary seasons ; "the — January|= = ar Ee | F z| kl ale ones Sans } a fact, however with the th the qpeegesoed unusually depressed, has 149°} 12°) in| a| 1} si—| iti hin nd. 3} 49° 12°) 37.09}. g | 0.30in.) 1] 1) 3\—| 3] 3) 2 2] y f similar inform- Mond. 4) 51 | 25 | 36.7 4 | 0.35 | 2} 2) 3).2) 3) a) 2 ation. To ask a question, ride is to emsalé the of | Wet: The Chron icler therefore trusts he shall be excused Tuesd. 5 22.| 395.7 | 4 | 0.06 4) 1) Er } or 1 In ‘this is part a aeestinedaien if his record be less eventful t Wedn. 6 53 | 18 | 35.1 5 0.33 1 2) = pene Dy rd er ae eae | 3| 2) 2] 3, 9 1 real em to either questions or | Pated. Ere the violet « shall strew the green an of the Friday 8} 53 | 22 | 34.6 | 2 | 0.26 | 2) 2) pl a i answers. When, gerne tical man sends a rep! tur. 9) 52 | 22 | 35.7 4! 0.20 11/3) A 1) 2)2 3) 1 founded upon his own knowledge, his name will no doubt | to engage attention. In the above period, the warmest days of this portion of Ja- | gi convey Her Majesty and the Court have removed to Wind- mary serene om tea we ee ere Gth in 1839; and the | ~ Among the man y things for which we are disposed to | sor, main the ¢ christening of the Princess is expected respass upon the ee of our practic ical friends, are the | to tak rit os marked by the COVENT GARDEN MARKET, Jan. 2,1 During the last fortnight the frost has tae Sager the supplies, and in consequence the pgiceshave advanced. The recent change of aieror > has produced a considerable difference in this morning’s market 3 the supply is b no es is anew variety ; the supply of ipa and Black Portugal osen both are rather indifferent; a are of pein quality * oa 6d. per sized Melons at from =| t sometii 2) ; Easter Beui rré.is selling under the name of “Clout Macau: at from 3s. to 4s. per reper Chaumon- telles are in some places marked Brown Beurrés, and fetch from i iresd’Au Beurré gfrom 7s. to 8s. per us adh Ta are tolerably plen- d 4d. each. Carrots are remarkably fine, and the supply cae “Turnips, afew good bunches, though the fferent, from 2s. 6d. to * The. cut iGofwer —The plants in in “is gone ty. ge Sonne Heaths. iped Camellias, and bouquets chiefly —— of white, red, and stri of dried flow bushel, 5s to 12s Panna acer ha per hf.-sve. 5s to 10s Pine Apples, p. Ib. 4s to 7s Melons, each, 2s FRUITS. ; Lemons, Lobe oe 6a 4 12s Mmearee per be seed | Sasa ond cage Portugal, per Ib. 8d to Is ‘Brazil, 24s Oranges, pr. doz. 6d — Spanish, 24st ae Ue as — Barcelona, 28 ES. ls tol Shallots, per Ib. 10d yy Bere ‘ Le Asparagus, per se — pic! er ae » or S 5 Cabbage Plants, p. doz. bunch. 2s to4s'| Sea-kale, re punnet, Is 6d to 3¢ 6d Brussels Sprouts, per hf. sve. 2s to 3s | Lettuce, C. » per score, 9d German Greens, or le, p. di to ats Sapgpin fed 6d |, White, 3s to. Endive, per score, 2s — Purple, ls 6d to 2s Celery, per bundle fess to a) Isto 2s Pota White, per ton, 65s Small » per punnet, 3d —. Red, 80s to! Watercress, per doz. small bunches, 9d Jerusalem Artichokes, per Parsley, per dozen bunches, 4d Mucor Wie bee punches: ts | Dinas ( ed) per toe bain urniy i Is Ee eS par 4 6d =i Thyme ( per doz. bunches, 1. » per doz. bunches, 4s to 6s Sage (; per doz bunches, *F per doz. 9d to Is Mint fi ceil anothers Red » per ls to 26 Pe; int (dried) per doz. bunch. 10d Skirret, per bunch, 1s 6d Marjoram (dried) per doz. bunch. 10d ra, per bundle, ts Savory (dried) doz. 10d Naleaie; per amie, ls 6d Basil (dried) per doz. 1s 3d Horse Radish, per bundle, Is Gd to 4s 6d Rosemary (green) per ach. 3s Spinach, per sieve, 2s Lavender ) per doz. bunch. 3s Onions, per bushel, to 4s Rhubarb » per bundle, isto 2s & — for picklg p. halfsieve, 2s to Capsicums (ripe), per 100 Is to 22 — Green (Ciboules) per bunch. 6¢ | Mushrooms, pers te ls 6d to oe — Spanish, per doz. 3s to 42 Monte Leeks, per doz. 6d to 23 Ferme lasted: por Tbs) Ii _ Garlic, per Ib. 8d | ‘Trufies )» per Ib., 3s Gd results of their te ae var detai utine are the soul of improv eme and quite sister; dy cong pet have be ti pr nf immediate em fer with Garden impos. | h ss of science | j the , an b 3 talk generally convey both instruction and amuseme: ent even m if i caine Seer Priamentary ramet ait eae = prove ~ —— failures ; for the latter, age ow Lahde rea | Se e Session; an n-teach more wisdom ya is gained from ngements are in megane fo for taking census. owe. went s who sa niieihasnattiis, In the money ket, i f the week is whether by post or not, to wra em in tissue. © before the; = are ked in cotto r tow. If this little Renition is nee the introduction of a new Government Snags 4 hesomntee taken, the difficulty of examining is much increased ; a Ba Bamies — the Fu nds, hi fi the fibres of the cotton stick to the surface of the leaves — had been concluded. d that Treland is is still agi- bk the pond + mated pa igi Ulster Association ust stop. It will always be “‘ a prime object of our Pay co! to be reduced to 6/. = ae" 100, _ The fortification of Paris se ‘the probability of a — prin cipal L topics of discussi per to ameliorate the ndition of the per ea whenever an opportunity arises of doing so ina proper manner. Bos F: sees ii of rent ier has end yet subsided, and n ety of the two grasses, the one with a ae pani co Setaria dasyuru; the other was a new y tomb during week. aaa have been entertained Test the long- and . Aj million of the past genus allied to Urochloa. Lord C.— —Nothing has yet been discovered concerning the pena th £ th, .Po ortugal ar oth method of cultivating truffies. The books that have been writ ten on the subject, few no! untries lee hostile attitude, and ea ay war Bri Oncidiums mber. 7. ower keg Tn rou ergy answer b ue pre if we ould read his writing, or understand what we tn AL Baa a Weill-wisher.—Our arrangements ae we phate teil how they will answer till they rat bot If he will give us his name, we shall be, hi sony to uvdatceienincs | of his assistance if we cin. no signature, will soon see that the names given in | the prospectus svartiveee at stad amaiimetane. We have several letters concerning associations among gar- more to see vi r to no practical conclusions. a promise of — 7 valuable information concerning this curious sub- | W28 threatened, but the mediation of Great ject, and if we receive it, we shall publish it “ete Should i te pacific we be sanuein Behe ite zee will be suppli su ions as "been aceepeed, sad: doubt: is cod path to the be — experiments on the truffle can be tried ome s confirm this "dia eon wi erations for war continue, Spanish @. S. must not hope for a situation through our means. Do ar Pec ee se until the we not know that he io sinte en to drinking, and that he lost his Vibes scree tio a 3 | MiGenegt Se Olties &. WAY Would ite etl te Cores hl ne hed apo te answer Sir George C. y wou useless, to do so . . . length Yy more space can at present spare. it into considera oe is Maly As the subject does not press, he will, we hope, be satisfied with are in progress, an answer some time during January. H readily urope nise it if he looksthrongh our columns. bs tbat that the imei ts » It is not true that either a botanist or gardener accompanied | will not’ be Maturbed. In E ratification of the the expedition to Chusan. “A very good naturalist, however, Dr. | dor i Pacha Cantor, 1 18 somewhere with the fleet, convention awe - Rage ey © Napier ok sictires +a We ee ae . ats » egenmnodions, acted without A Sa ; but a seco) Newcastle-under-Line Od ree by carp whe: ereby ae ie . itable to him. Pee one s this man think Poh concedes evi int that the sole object of masters is to plunder their men? 1 se . ~ were a servant of 0 ours, we should be very much afraid he would | Conditionally to the Sul The mais plunder us if he goal. = Pan Syria and is marching towards Egypt.—The T. B. will see that his suggestion was anticipated. eutting a 5 . through the middle of the paper, the te cchor ser bers Agri- election of President i: nited States has terminated cultural and Horticultural matter will b m the the return of Harrison, who enters with wre wy ghe to:étiain it only for fur yearé : . Hodson will find his neerning lists of wee ia se aiemarscoare nae ng Dep A 504 asucceeding nu Minister of Finance hed brought forward ich are calculated to Tur Courr.—Her Majesty and be gary On Wednesday | the Queen ied Prince Albert to Frog- and Her Majesty participated in f Kent accompanie the skating, and the ice at deners. The “ Benevolent Tastitaton or & the relief of Aged and Indigent Garden in every way the igg by his Royal Highness. —Prince > George of Cambridge 1 ‘Scott, Scheers. 5 eee iret ami Garden y others. of potash or saltpetre, pehigg by Mr. iiss forwarded, thane We of 50/. cowards dhe weeceeage ire; and the Queen Dowager — cet : eS _ bs inal - Bi. | 10 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [N°-1 His Royal ep ettiar the Deke of me pc although Rusera the Princess Mary. of Hesse | her husband, whom he looked wpon, he said, as t the right right ; absent from Kew, oded Dr. Seard to ply _ te | Darmsta dt was ‘cotonsd December 17, wy. Captain Walker has been presented wi poor families in the ee, as well as the > the follow | fi-box p brilliants. The je ee 9 in ‘te union workhouse, with a good dinner on rt reo ; | ried to his eee Highness the Grand Dake Alexander. Saltas n are = emplaged in making a diamond n and that ~ pare of the Queen’s free-school should ~e The cold which se | fajes wi f and plam- pudding on New Yea pete. We learn : from Circassia that the mountaineers | < fearfal gre mpest has one ov the Black Seg { | reg t bee day, pal y thes Pie of them as pen ired it, be supp lied have st d d th = ot held w which and the Sea of Marmora. The m-vessel chartered with beater — this inclement weather, at his Royal | was a aie station on the ¢ e walls, which | by the Government to carry tro bre and money into Highness’s expen re of earth, have been completely ive With the | Syria has been wrecked in the Sea of Marmora. The Ry Ce Ree cxesption o of Anspa, the Ras ow not a ra ae ll cm eg Lape et the vessel before leaving in | her, and th f them ae — a Russian stea) e | ] tian. P rceassia. mer _ Praxce.—The fortification of Paris still continues to| Sratw axp PortuGas.—The intelligence fro ror ti ecked on the coast its Macher Ah is ——— te Peninsula during the past is of considerable im im- of Khil i; engin eee wae Sulee the storm, the the opposed parties wath vu diferent | feeling The | portan ee. . The Spanish | Governmen t has declared _ its | vessel was ae wn seahd, and 19 men an _ pe i for fi i sengers — "The Trebivonde ear ork — of the and ~ reat is taking activ woh on boa ~ me t y by a wa thre ir yey ne shee is ss cro Ps of the King’ military measures to priser the threatened aggression. others g mad ton "fog and pet sed to ‘arn the fir e of the fo rts pond the Parisian populatio The cause of queveal b eager n the two countries is stated | were onliged to rv [ished to the masts; twenty more, w i If it were in’ ree: rnded, thay & ion) os $s follows sagen or treaty for the navigation | were to ee have their limbs pee Be , it wool & mit a gre reat strate- 7 the aoe was poner in August, 1835, by which a — getie “favs “ag i f Pari Id be ine | mixed commission was appointed to fix a tariff, and regu- Hot —Among which hare tifying the mara and, that taken; ay? conquest of France lations connected therewith. The first set of commis- | lately peng presen mor to ae ees Chambe r, one of the would follow. It would lead to the ioners met to deliberate thereon, and came to certain | most remarkable jis that of t of the military con of the pa ak France would | conclusions, which, when submitted to the Portuguese | and dea lers in tobacco, living t Rot tterd am, who remon+ be exposed to the chance of losing all in one Seen: The erie em — re —- Another commission was - cerhie we - * dey on of , hes which will impose a con- safety of France, according to this party, wa — Rhine, | pointed, and terms were settled between them. On this | siderably ty on tobacco. They are of opinio: the Loire, and at her frontiers, and not in hs er capital. | Ker pas ao of ihe treaty a report was presented | that such : oe if s not w —— inoue the trade in A difference has arisen between the Sony cto of orocco | to the Portuguese Cortes in the session just soled: The age bl at leas t on reatly di diminish it, by which the a ay and the French ates ament, , for wh eb the latter, Pod is delay which ensued in the ps ussion ef _ matter many persons w will be deprived of their means of su nbeiat said, have resolved ti by the Portuguese has adopt sive he ‘ ead be appears, that, at a public examination of ® native ‘er, da maven as a ground of po of the met of being res ber’ will he diminished. serious nature, notwithstanding the — © declaration fang -—The Brussels Mi- at Algiers, a dispute arose between aF in the Queen's cor on elo osing » that | nis aa has brought in a bill to the ‘Chamber = the were of the Po ces: of } Moguor " iy © rs ot it would be one of the principal object of d psa 08 hopes seepage J that the force of the Be whic’ assault on the French pa M. porte, | inthe new session to be commenced this day. pring tee Te shall be carried up to to 80,¢ 000 men , iuseeal the Frenct “Const, protested, bat Tnefectaaly, and he _ So deeply do prof won this poe that they have ad- | of 50,000, on account o f affairs in then hauled dow ner fr his fing, a himself and ¢ ese Government, in which . Euro In the wrens B ve the i wa general discus- residents under the f the British vasanae| Bes made, Pt ifthe Government of Her Most | sion not the —— = ~iy r the prevention of duelling The Spahi meanwhile was pond a the Emperor of Mo- Faithful 3 agony do not within 25 be absolutely eatity has been co rocco, by whom he is said to have been well treated ;| the terms finally agreed on by the commission ers, Spain | Iva ALY node 3 "letter rom Mil p that the Arch- : x L dali ae 2 eta A since then the French Consul and residents having |'will employ military force to compel it. Att i king- ed the “ anh at Tangiers, ha ~ f d by the | dom, is shortly to proceed to fre rg in order to be means of embarkation to leave Mogadore. hoe Spanish Government to Great Britain, cling it - ‘said, | intrusted with an poe share of government of mad ~ a manne of six sail of the line i is to sail to | upon this coautry to sanction this appeal to a the empire nese intend sending a d ti Ta nd enforce reparation for the insults offered to aa agen overnment have also a Vienna, to pray a eet to continue the Archduke # country as their m: nora os ally, csiming: the in the government of his Italian dominions, where the here of Napoleon pie wen of England, = es hespenes * uo report of his recall has excited universal regret. _ The have been so numerous, that on Satarday pag were esti- | federis The Portuguese ees t hav Sardinian Minister of Finance, ani the private secretary mated at 100,000, Notwithstanding the state of oe cided to suspend provisionally, ‘for fe forty resin o a- | of King Cuarces Apert, bad arrived at Milan and had weather, the avenue of ~ i continues | rantees of ~ Jnr of the house of the * | several interviews with the Viceroy. It is believed that | thronged with people arch to view the —to ge all ts from 18 to 25 years of their visit is connected with certain measures of safety, | “4 ch issued, that dari ~ to compel ‘all "publi phen: excepting judges and cl fa | which it behoves Austria and Sardinia to adopt in the life of Napoleon, the Saat mber was repea' santa y i t of an attack on the part of France. It is said that | the period of events which hed 4 yeoerha here ote on oi Noleniern, anf og abn gg public employés Dake of Bordeaux gone to study naval science | destiny. In December 1799, = e Oporto, » poms | and affairs in the Arsenal of Venice. ity established. Tn same oath of tthe hl | given tol — m2 y oer ons wre fo the ¢ Rome.—The note of Cardinal ‘Lambraschini, on the lowing year, and nearly on the sane oo he — the | C me crtilery is about being sent . Rives, subject of the marriage of Count Demido a, ry — g all infernal machine of the Rue Nica bey of De- Save mich a oe it is rumou ured rigadie er-General | mixed marr’ ria ges to ‘be null, unless ‘there i st en- ie h Cc Cc £ GI 3 c s g _ S cember, » BC Was crowne eae 2d of overnor and | gagement il F rae Ca- December, 1805, he gained the battle oP uae On cine sane The vessels 8 of war in the Ts ‘agus, it is re-} tholic religion, has thro the ith of December, 1508, he entered Madrid. oe the shar are te be fitted out, to be in i i should | barrassment. The D Dake * gd berg is precisely 16th of p eecortead 1809, he ea himself fro casion —s to blockade the ports of Cadiz, Malaga, | the same position as Count Demidoff, and letters ps Empress Jo poison _On the 20th of December, 1812, he ‘Alice ante, Ba &e. It is hoped, howev er, that the | Rome state, that the Russian Ambassador has, com- returned yk in fluence of the British Government may prevent matters | mand of the Emperor Nicholas, demanded a categorical the snows of 1 Dukeion Final ally, ia ia December, his remaina, z explanation of the note of Cardinal mbruschini, The after an exile of twenty-five years, have been brought to} Gare —The papers are filled with ae i a“ Papal Court is in the utmost perplexity, from which it their resting-place on banks of the Seine. | prepara re vin progress in anticipation of w | cannot escape but by the oe be ~ spe The __ The driver of a Paris omnibus was lately found — All no letters emt from a “Asean, Berl, eet in this city Le adopte mode of attack, ing in his room. | The goles Velng' iafore ned of the fac Manich and Vien ae whi le at ws of | saitiag solitary persons in n the street, they i lie pee . ne te oe e that “a raw “pen France | in wait ouse to restore animation ineffectual, nantes d th i tat t, in surprised and w baerey in coef persen ite the deceased. i one of his pockets he ‘too — apa a ee are merely precautionary, id “that the most pet et of the city, and upwar ards _ of s- vered a ten docum by which the coachm reason to hope that the sense clared ‘oat, being sepa ‘fn a secret society, his ture had the "od feeling which actuate the present Government | city in another much- gs ee ted quarter. The it the Ki ig him rance will render those ane superfluous.— | Marquis de mg was attacked a few nights si une! he had d i| Mun al ‘In the spring, a corp of 80, 000 mea * his own palace by four men, rer as he — d se to waded ‘Maes The a ave taken this d at Heilb the co was killed. Some of these outrages are said to have been startling case in seo, and rome seer di are entertained of the King of W veulee ostensibly for the purpose of committed in open day. making extensive exerc’ ne s and manceuvres. Amongother| Napres.—A agnomsed — ee a coffeehouse- M. VAbbé de Lamenna tried on week by the changes in introdu ced into the equipment of the ae | keeper, married fow years since to a respectable Court of Assize of the Sein vat he endeavouring to over g bre-bay milar English woman, Aaving geal panale children, eight, ihe throw the Government and excite sedition, by certain 0a tock send by th bh f irail passages contained in a pamphlet, of which he is the au-| the old kind of * anata The serjean arifle | which had driven him to a state of fi reas, has shot his, thor. The jary found him guilty of provoking hat ike those used by the » Tyrolene, ary all aie pine are to | wife, and an Soncaaer himself, A liberal subseription against the government, and of writing apologies’ for acts | | oo Briti agp pone. having | has been made for the orphans by the British residents. regarded by the law as crimes. The Court sentenced him | asked for in “ae cage e kind of percussion-lock | The French eon seg ae Sagi Baron Billi one year's impri —- and a fine of 2,000 frances, to- | adopted for the Bav ota ne , the King has cial a| umpire betw issio} respectively appoi gether with the cos complete set of models of all, inds of arms to be sent to | by the British and gales jr to adjust the The Arc gee hop ge Paris, —>* the funeral of Na; apo- London | sulphur rage oe “The Ba- leon at the Invalides, observed abbés among t fal ssy whe clergy who “aid shot appear very well versed in the minutize men in the sen of the soueoenen Seaemieas pur foe successively sled these functions at the ~~ of fe man convicted of belonging to them is, | London and Na sh of his attend- | after poles Re ergone the punishment to which he may| Maxnra.—We Jearn from Marmorice bay, that the Zebra, ommissary nat gig Sarl ane veqieheaell the be sentenced, to ‘be ex expelled from the State. in which -_ has been driven on shore, and totally wrecked, with the = reverend gentlemen to pare area him outside the hall h loss of three of her crew. ~~ Bellerophon was also church, which they did without hesitation, and on driving | be forbidden to ae that State without special por the point being lost, and the Pique had her 4 found a to be laymen of | _— ion. He is subje to strict surveillance carried awa waar yiae'e who had been unab Ae tickets for a | in his own State, and i lists of the Esy errr —By extraordinary express from Toulon, dé ood place in the church, amd accordingly, disguising pr State are to be comm pobre a to all = = in | spatebes from Alexandria to the 12th instant have bees: y procured admission. | order that oe against them may be received. The envoy sent to Syria to arrange the € moarke The Finance Minister pedis on Wednesday the Turxey.—The plague has secu a. isl a the ation of the Egyptian army bas returned to Alexandriss budget of 1842. The ordinary amd extraordinary ex- | Balkan, at Schumla, Varna, an agetan penses are estimated at 1,316 millions of frames; the ordi- | lages. The authorities being anxious sap nap ar pro- refused to ratify the convention entered into “ bebweet naty revenue being estimated at 1,162 millions, which | gress of the scourge, immediately formed a cree eet ln cor- Mehemet Ali and Commodore Napier, on the ground: six millions | don, and established — in the infected d pe that the Commodore acted without authority. The X em: ion archioness Pacha ‘ t e ay an prese a let amber to create rentes, if necessary, for a ca vital of Sad the Sultan. She was opel by the lady of Captain | i cas the Turkish fleet, and to_sen® millions a francs ; and prepay that, elierinig tar the the con- | Walker, on Walker Picha, i he is n fe iw st ie, ad can ie ee te tender his unqualified sa tinuance of peace, he did not intend to oars the public were very graciously pone da To Mrs. sec he 3 Ma. Shioareothe The Pacha has acceded ae $ works of peace, but would demand a credit for them. jesty spoke in the most flattering terms of the Sil pation, axl eh the hich tha Japan. sossece i . FAN. 2.) “THE GARDENERS’. sterile Conmeninnn hi Capt. Fanshawe, _— of the Pacha’s rything demanded of him gchinen as P. eceived an overland despatch we n full retreat on a pang of Lake column was a — the es rou’ ar due south, through Batanza, and the ancient territories of the Am. ne and Moa abites, east of the Dead Sea. Whether it will try to enter Egy ypt t by she Denert of Suez, or proceed through Ga if of Akabah (the eastern horn of the Red Beal ill find i it practicable to cross th desert i in the face of the Bedouins, ast - the Arabs have atta eked a. caravan of the ptured 150 camels and a = ait a have carried off also yrs Waghorn’s camels, with goods, money, and agg ‘leuanens The ammount plundered is laid at m 3 02. to 400. The Pa cha has announce | seca In St. — eu en about on the ice, and in 800 79 ms were postin especially of small craft. Between Deptford and London-bridge the c a mre ment d in irc greatly impeding the navi. eminent physician had recently told him was the cause of hindtpfce sudden di tg out of a hundred. “ Natural dea’ The e reeze , the thermometer ntary Movements.—It is seen ‘that Mr. W. A. Will wt M.P.. for eg Te will accept the pi Hendin ds. The ‘ “een eldest across the — = shell be vompenal: by a gua ard. UnitepD the Presi Quincy eg and = € pre held office ree Porter were defeated in aoe rare ue pouleatieds e New York packet- eg Independence reached ih Moy Dec. 3 brought The President's message, son of Lord se i and Sir D. | Migraine are named as candidates, Mr. Yates, i said, does not intend ming forw: natn for the county of Mr. J. M. Glad: e resign is ex —s * The daily nest : a a e the proceedings of a i “Finsbury, who has been charged Duncombe, o the sitting reve Se with using his Trearre of the Soc ‘0 procure iety for the Diffusion of dge, signatures to a requisition calling upon him to come ogee at the next vacanc The airman, n —— and other vessels have been | the army.—On the e day an inques roe a iy upon teatly injured by their cables being cut by the ice, and | Mrs, Juliana Napier, an wisely maiden indy, who had their drifting against ete other. ld een found dead in her apartment e dece: was one pass from shore to shore vesea erent. labour and peril. . five cape 8 aiden ladies, » By a exception of the e few steamers still navigating t ungest, s the w rman Pri On up, and the paddles broken oy the masses of ice thrown Christmas ae pe net e Ducken, the widow, went out to up by ut midnight on Wednesday, the ther- dine, lea ing he er pre miner. the worse for liquor. A d tabi thaw com- th ing, and Om in — her ene The —_ » being un age of the deceased, sent for d, afte $s expect to — - buried in St. James’s S age was seventy-seven. Visitation of God.”’—On the same night Mr. Payne he! no less pire be inquests at Guy’s hospital, all ‘ttising beers uiana lt xpedition has left this country to explore an a i the boundaries of that colony, which was eon- ered from the Dutch, and ceded to Great Britain by js fog of Paris. This country, therefore, is entitled am as ye e extent of | territ ory as was posse sed by the had Senate and representatives assembling a quo- sub-committee appointed by the ch Lord bem; and, d her The snow is stated to be 16 to 18 feet sae in the | Brougham, to iny tigate. the charge, repor' that Mr. boundary as far as the ag Te “and a neighbourhood of "Washington ns Tooke had. employed his influence as Treasurer with the sere |The Brazi lia government, ae has _ CAN judgment has been recovered against | tradesmen of thé Sockets and that he ‘had used the agency j lately I f the ; eliiimed 1, Sir John Caldwell, for 84 “068s of the Secretary for mespte a i by, an ribet supposed to belong to Great 1 Batal itain. It mncy, = which his large estates, consisting of the | Mr. Tooke re sin gned the treasurership —It has encroached largely on bs south-western bow: og eg scignory and fief of —— with extensive | mills thereon, ame that Lord retin, aoe is to be browght forward he colo H and Pirara, a village in 500 candidate. for Dublin in University on thn & En — lonists wae oitl hd he as early as 1811. Her Me a full satinfantion, ca therefore. Brazits.—The mails from Rio Janeiro were landed at | will be y bo rat a colony. The commissioner se- Falmouth on ” Wencedag night. The news from Rio | in the representation of Plpmon | ected to execute this duty is Mr. R Schomburgk, ex= f the insurgents Census of 1841.—We psa t T. H. Liste with the colony, to the exploring of to negotiate with the government at Ri io, and it is hoped Esq., the Hon Phipps, anv T. sees Esq., sot has alrea ady devoted several years. The Prussian will be settled, The French Ad- * tomate for taking account of a population | government = the tind for ‘Permission to appoint a gen- mirel has arrived in the river Plate. f Great Britain, in July next, pursuant to the new Act. | tleman to the n, who A. —————————- The firs t-named gentleman min his capaci ity of Registrar- | natural story: and ul for their institutions. e Nels. general, is specially constituted a commissioner - the | consent of our government has been given, and Me he Metropolis.—The inmates of the metropolitan | terms of the act; the others have been recently asso- | Richard Sehoisbor pk, a brother of the “Britich commis- and s eatiartos Workhouses, to the amount of upwards of _ with him ‘by her Majesty. Mr. Mann, of the | sioner, Presa accompanies the expedition for that 30,090, received a plentiful supply of the staple fare of “ne al Register-office, has received the appointment of | purpose. Old Engla nd, on Chri oe The Earl of Errol, as ry. Liability Parishes as to Exposed Children and Dead Lord Steward of Her Majesty’s Household, benevolently The Army — cote =o ap eae Molyneux, of _ ies.—At an inquisition held at Kensington, before Mr. feateeid to the Devt: ‘Marsha a ee — 8 do- | Sth a rwich, has appeare om —_ Wakley, on a child he 28th, nation e ben efit of debto gen the Mayor a: grein 3, seta complained of no } in the p h ‘on, ho n a few hours, rison, a penta supply of beef, | saluted by the painheaner * a city when they aes estion arose as to t the forth of the ph officers or bread, ‘porter, and coals, with Is. 6d. im ar the officers most va t. su ~d “3 Fires. —On Saturday morning, a Seatbactine fire broke he ing thee Majesty, that due respect of Messrs. Goodhart and Son, in should | be paid t ae wie The Mayor and Mr. Palmer | nion mae cy arish ‘otic ave no power to incur any atc ver _The premises covered an extensive said they were but individual natigiateites, and ould | expenses for the prosecuti f vagrants, and have no the e dwelling- house ; they | not be said to have the control of the police. The Colonel asty to provide for the b tory of @ corpse found in the ere h, 0 ment consider that there hy! a autho- into Pt street, opposite the London Docks. _Un- quarters about it ; he was determined that proper respec rity for neurring expense in advertising for the dis- fortunately, although a large number of engines b The agiatt ton | cove e person who exposed such hia or such the spot, aided by several of the firemen from t ked if it had if th corpse. If, indeed, upon any such advertisement ve day “mf of England, their efforts were of little avail, and the entire | plaints from any other ‘regiment; and it was said that this | were discovered nese ne ilding, which w the most extensive in London, ame velo ope ed in one vast body of I f th laint f the gallant Colonel, flame, romiee fare AG olence. The fire ra with putea doin fury, a and it was not “rem hy houses were destroyed or injured that it was pt There picions are e not accidental Th Sir ri Bourke.—A colossal bronze statue of this General ome eran ahi ge the Aca one é loss i perty * for 10,0007. On Sauedah morning, 5 abred b half-past torr, for its miny sidered the first great woe: of at for hich that distant a dread dfal fi party.” The rein appears fo be that t there are no ‘ands on the book, ran the Police Committee ordered i erased. The magistrates said they would entat: on n the their child ld th question. nor to aibvértGkiing a pected ft the cy = ofiering a reward for the a) ik gece of the delin —— ailway Ci pe are and Port Dynilaen line of communication | between Dublin and London has been declared by the government com- y will be indebted to the talents of the mother missioners rs to be the "shortest both in distance and time, workshops “cater to Mr. Lawrence, carpenter and country. . Brunel apetinng which 2 builder, , Pitfield-street, Hoxton. No lives were lost, but New Laws affords an _ opportunity of shawering letters between the the loss is estima t a great amount, mostly i sured i amen al wl ie tagoaiend fe the formation of t ble necting has the re ork and West of — offices. The pret s itia upon rage efficient plan ; and as it is yah thet been held at ‘Staines, for the in luction of a railway of p by fire in the metropolis, during the last t hei navy can be completed with volunteers, without im-| from the metropolis et = town. The oa. fncoey ri, a agers to a> ain extent, Fete = o the | pressment, =. it is ahaa ie that the same plan should - [ pl ena - plan fo a naan ailway, above, d that no fewer than tw resorted militia, and that. system | and a provisional € ne ing mended. of ballot will | Babe Sbolished. It is also said that Che hercers was appointed — ‘Phe line of railway from The Weather.— Piers: in London, was in reality ments are making fort the p purpose 0 of bringing before Par- Birmingham to Gloucester taken place ; the trains ‘a Christmas-day; ev f earth, air, water wersed the liné pote ngs ‘the s — —— the and even fire, indi cating it to besuch. On hursday even-| Sudden Deaths. —An n inquest was held on Monday on o hours and a ing, at 6 o'clock, the therm at 26 5 Willi - and by midnight it had sunk to 21, and towards morning aged 68. Thed f robust constitution and in it became still At 6 0’ iday morning it | the general enjoymen health. On Wednesday hai - however; risen to 26; ont dio cn pany the | afternoon last, about one o’clock, he went out to take a e a ,and @ © mercury had = and returned shortly aha three when he appeared as has heen brought t again fallen to 2), and at 60 "clock ‘a ie pe 18, 14 degrees The servants, —— 4 bell ting 8 went sists f twenty-one. aches ‘eh snty-thee feet span an ~— freezing point. During the day the atmosphere ‘bere ce on "ebiteting the roo! w deceased height.- Tt is abo ut pana was very dense and hing while in the “outskirts, and for | floor, and Lady le by his ig hos | one sath Since the foun as miles round, _ there in the | porting his head. A su diately ' mus- | that period 400,000 cubic feet of uilding have cB a tard-poultices to deceased’s feet, at the same ress- | €' , and more t 11,000,000 ps The extreme me did not, however, deter age ing an opinion that an that could be done would be | This wonderful s sses of persons from crow wading t the iee. The e Serpentine poe fer ene as deceased was - Yh a few minutes | easter and I was extinct. bags i had passed for the first pte on the p th day 10,000 pean ventured ani In Kensington- gardens the ponds were thronged with fashionable com- dott dace’ eth a ca occasioned. by diese oa | sear Ghoti, cane Vas THE GARDENER®Y’ CHRONI CLE. [N° 1° 12 pleted to Buxton, on the be during 1841, it will phoned ee qui nr hay transit for a from Preston to Manchester, than Apert presen ier? folk strest, fai tie purpose of f considerin the too! of manera a Puree 4 to join oxy "Northern and Eastern arket, eit Thetford. The Tires Cambridge, N other Se comnts connected with of Douro and numerous 1 districts, vote by ballot, triennial parliaments, | me no-property qualificationy and the reply to Lord | comparatively mild description.—. happened at Carronhall on povoo et last. —A fatal coal- pit Pipes Ayo s_from hi his fe m by the — be postpon He con calls, ned. cluded b moving the ba ce t of the association, at its rising, o Th no answer was ret penn to her An alarm » ako jcomediately given, it was discovered that a Be eS h, +h ¢} The weekly rent was announced to be | 51d. 4s The Ulster parse second special general —Information has been meeting has been The Earl the chair. The abet t of it was to consider the recom y ‘ ridge, Lanarkshire, on I f endations contained in the re, oe tt = - ult., eh _— of John Green, vi e. was suo dently not pone cntachen ad oe years. was held on ural fraud Toa ‘ds.—On Monday Mr. Oddy, woollen-manufactu appeared. before the magistra ates, | to answer 3A bie infor was Mansfield.—On C pen cava yeh. . ks brought out, bour, who was paid 7 | no water was to ioe obtained for a considerable time; and were scattered jacks of — - = which ake | the hou se and fui urniture were co mpletely destr oyed. _ The sorted to her. She had numerous Seis rs, many mea seh and peedily fell aprey to the dvoartag-el wArtesy c and on a ith which ; for the four next houses, being th a rof i “tertnce, caught, and were burnin multa- og the bare walls being left standing. A messenger was dapat to house, | —— its — down. | who of the roads, it was near four o’clock before obeyed. The — ag se oa Ithough separated by walls, are have been built under on see er ae ated reached the top of eauies, the line of and as ford’s it then came mae: e — sar i a f th * cotenidanition © occasion his mill a gcse -Royds. The first charge was “= rning, the exte! Hollins, Si Siddon, and Co ley, was. destroyed by fire. |The valuable i total aac is estimated at mo ng the c con- working a rs of that bog three half-hours for meals, instead of two rs for breakfast, &c., and one for dinner, as e Act; the second charg: was for employing reduced to a wreck. y 300 hands will, is ca- hauniy. ie deprived of of employment. The loss is estimated at about 1b, 0000. as the @ occurrence that no 4 MSc and the hind, for not paving, the oi of work regularly tered in workers. The manager stated x. what he was re far ad dvanced as & render them useless. The were insured in = Royal a Offices, hat the insura’ ee not, Wiltshire — — Important Case.—Mr. ani 1 inquest mt lies “heen held, and the jury, after dhens-reming the bodies, have tion of God, of fever. from New York. 10 hours is. Palmer, of during the summer employed poor persons to pick haw- don; e Excise officers o} arrant, and on bari Gia as upwards of 2,000 lbs. weight, and | Ful node ates 40% fo the aménnt6e | charged Mr. Palmer | had 14; she has 69 passengers Sen | freight of cotton, &c., with nearl in spe- oe green would bring the Presi- in | para tively encouraging. hemisphere | hw Pennsylvania banks resu perpen cal nts on the be abe , as required to save their - Under this expectation, the exchange at Philedelphis i 1 New York, had improved from 3 to 1} Lag cent. A con- siderable amount having been = sides pac by the Great We storn. The fi Inn, Halsted, wi e represented that he had been a og builder and surveyor at Ipswich, that he the | With manufacturing order of Mass: tied that be bak © wike oP od to the stat. 17 Geo. TIT., ea 29. The case was heard in | 7 antics upon the interest of which he was living. It ap- | Devizes on Friday last. € court et an that ars he ran up a score amounting to 13s. 8d., and then | the Rais had been ettabis 20 Bat fiwathora’ Yosiiee “cx: let ‘for the purpose of Lagpiran 3 the Rose and Crown, aes oe Desalie Reed tie of se thas: } ade had thereby i penalty of 200/., which he was noth § a pee aat of afresh tg He ssid he in- | edindeed te g tadeood tat the 0 nd information; but, tended to make her husband a present of or 400/., jc acheare underst Loighy erp itlakematens . z L Le in; so t ane toc and the Ps hea Hated at toe tea oF sessing § poae te wan witha (Roatan ot te content of the defendants was The | © Windsor —& few evenings since, as Mr. Baldwin, a eS, Wielkécld to shreds. ery | been offered ‘for their apprehension, but no traces of them have yet been discovered. Look Ey cae ae introduced into the of news. A new species of security has been Stock-Exchange, called Trinity Bonds. They — pate acons on on account of 14 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 7 [N* 1 Harlequin and the Giant Helmet, and a good subject it . The far-famed Seven eee a goodly array 0 e veiled Nun, —_ aap Faustus, and © remote down to Foshan Oey appeared upon the stage, Tom het amb ani Seat portrait you make of me. | woe he was desirous that I should paint him, and Said, about them. | They bore the unfortunate workmen by ” T thencommenced m my w and I had an abundance of time to study the cae a siognomy of this s ‘yo outhful sovereign. It is less hand- ‘The Thumb and the Two Kings of Brentfi us—nay even Don Quirote, filched in some former day | on his countenance from thi sing power, was rea pear in hand more like smallpox has left me ravages He looks e aman of twenty- -two than a youth of eighteen years of age. His beard is tole ws strong a at the chin, o the mustachio bili moment—** Come tell me, my my fellow, what are they doing there?” ome tell me” here, ‘* Com me’’ there, and “ so 0} ee 1e chapter. Now, I thought | would constitute myself a public benefactor, we re- panei is load from the poor workmen’s backs; so J e le lessons in mechanics, attende dia a public lecture wo, visit the works, J propor anyselt as their guide, and as one fully vedi to explain whole affair. The workmen, to save them. do this jovial company was covered bya whole ne b f his voi selves trou readily provide me with credentials to all f basket cavalry capering and eutting such figures as | soft and his conversation is interest ing, | passers-by, so r turned cicerooney. 2 gin is y poor liveli. none but ‘‘ holiday horses in a frost’? would think = Fatigued hae | diphaonatie receptions and visits of etiquette, ean! er and resident, ro already lost in “ heatre. The perform- | the Sultan seemed to take much pleasure in our little fami- tthat is no profession. Allambrun.—I beg Your ances concluded with a dio: msisting of a es Wf lier intervie He appeared = interested even in the pier moat ; iv 8 mine. “ge —If you gain your liveli. views painted the Messrs. Grieve, and embracing in | details respecting my family, whi ch he inquired w with eee thus, as you have said, how does it happen that you succession the leading topi e year. The whole | some minuteness, and spoke of ere found stretched “slong the public road, on a heap ncluded with an allegorical national tableau, —— to perform rae’ sea service for an Eu uropean, of i at ville? Allambran—It was all to Britannia the Queen of Prowess, with her navy as | ‘ Doubtless,’ said he, ‘your family 1 knows that 1 have be ne ork. I bivouack omainville. Presi- the tat of war sweeping her unto vietory over the orld, directed you to abe ‘py —— g | dent. there are lodging-houses. Allambrnn.—I ADE 1.—The — was founded on a familiar ; to your tab icesin’ ; but, Ip you, do ter me.’— | will expl The w her doesn’t favour me. The cold story = the Lag * Arabian ‘Nigh ” and was entitled, Harle- This eget jeu @esprit w as accompanied by a smile.’’ The | frightens away visitors, and I have had nothing to do these or the Genii of the Be: sittings in all. The por- | two days. he poor cicerone was sentenced to three Bottle. ‘The crowds that besieged the doors of this ‘thea- trait was Ss prono unced to be a perfect likenes _ the sit ep nt. Sultan gave Herr Kretschmer permission to take a copy Weg ng W. J. P. Wade, of the Fran rye! holiday folks. Pit and ae were srs ery fen - d Francis Egerton toe Bi peing g even M wat gassis—L Court Martial. Royal Ailey, was tried by tial, at the Ca of Go od Hope, a July last, on foat charges—First, tor anen se eres was granted to the i Spetle tient Ag: peotant a sho! " time there was no sitting room great work, his ‘6s Poissons - Fossiles,” he would pers in the pati n the whole the audience were pleased | that distinguished naturalist to extend his researches, has with the pantomime, and WIELAND announced it for re- | offered screen te 500, for nec and to leave them with voices, oe Blue-jack inioi —‘‘ While things Ts eee as as shy — aise see, we Sercery had it all our HMiscellancous. , dye see, fa Johnny Crapau fought w A grey parrot has been purchased by Prince Albert for | wo ete oni if he built m apoyo we took them! An fifty pounds. It is three years of age, and has been in 80 Belzebub grew aie ans ilst 4 British this country about fifteen, mo. onths. his.p! i shall pect ptecray be topsy ral sentences in French. it sings ‘the rah verse 2 * The rvy,. d’ye see? 2 p So hi with the cototets and & that braved a thousand years,” and likewise the first ds. w! e Princess ith, and Joe Miller.—A oer salen sovinty quoted, very few persons: an aa ‘who he was. His was John a born in afally she wrate sev peal dra dra- ¢ piece: e was dreadfu ‘oud! the gout, particulary in his right hand, Tuich prevented him fre- ag ntly from writing, and he was confined to his bed-room Royal’s | wheels PB to disrate the grog- ears and promote rae ~ gg not 9 = a “ re be a rnal fi a gentl eman, in stating to Major Armstron g, and subse quently writing, that he, on coming of age, was entitled * 3002. per annum, by the Mn lt of Sir Walter Wade, which he (Lieu utenant W.) knew to be false; s peel for pro- ducing a letter, Gacadeting to hav e been writ tten by his mother, in which was a paragraph tle to legac y of 6,0002, the said paragraph being a t , and an imitation of his petro fed -writing, for the » purpose of misleading Major Arm- strong; thirdly, for Anis 2a gross at ew ‘out havi lently obta’ ros al s for havin udu severa money, by drawing bills on Sie: and Co., prate hee ndon, knowing at the Gi ad no funds in * Cuihions Offer 7 Morrie. —Baron Von Hallberg of Munich Journal him last,’ di nut ‘Credulity—3. few “4g: = an neneve farmer’s ld about the ted upon by fortune-teller, or spaewife, >, who ofered to lift the a gipsy oF ry ear 1720, tie Siok Hat mis ay title ests.’” Cait roline ¢ wife George H.), when Princess of Wales, to be perfahied for Mottley’s benebt and disposed - Le a of futurity, and give her a Posh of what was in store for her for a mere trifle. er showing off some of esas cantrips, and making the wu cette housewife be- A’ a ry ie Gleadowg, had the gift of * ging the her pe she prevailed upon i which, after describing ‘his castle and possessions, he pia i tes is very melancholy to “behold none but myse self 7 ha ae, theres, resolved to ere other simpleton tL: 95 since it med tha! ein and are but s a qe I baci all Fug indies, pote the m8 oF bi ies ane Py ia y eb in mete oking- Zita, riages are m | my hee to ar Be 16 2 20 gs ye teeth, and Feeutifal ‘Tittle fedt. "She must honest parents, and her fame must bag fr apapae dress elegantly, but vely aa Lie et, but no many tickets wii wn hand in the drawing- s Boxes. n the re paths of the fam Miussioneérs for salaries of an soit by “3 * auld Pion clock,”’ a braw gare | cow wou ald come Foutin’ to the door A paewife, must she ye Pp , ribands, false ha nor ses mad le robte eae ate ing n being wa luments of the payed &e. _ the courts of ice t in | and Mrs It is hates. necessary | wear aaa @ escid ts o her own taste and fancy, eee England, it appears that hat Look Chief Justice of the te say Ae ape cow ye not male ae appearance to add | of what the herd of fashionable women may say about it Court of Queen’s Bench, ‘‘ according to ancient usage,”’ | to the dramatis persone.—Scot, | She must know or learn how to rad ct rive. She mpst anni bri Bhs four yards of broad cloth Slatistics.—In Great Bri ritain he canal “3 ore in | never knit, that being a mere manu cupation to con- fone rapeny’ Hall, and thirty-six loaves of sugar, pre ti b 3 744,847. | ceal stupi pe Bony’ Ler be allowed ged big if she be sented to y the particular ig on 4 pe Aime of of mari 98,030 po rly. “The | perfect in art, it b o listen to the bad the court; and = Fiosan puisne judge rece’ aually t dens hs. i on "332, 2 700 yearly, which aate Series 4 ab annoy Vichbes | in ot ag | sie She from the small silver plate peer cightoi neal 25, "592 ins Fy _ se meen, pdilgy daily, and 40 | shall be of the house i tters, and loaves of su ugar. eas guhe @ dea ths am: np roportion a i, age shall be rag to yield to her reasonal bie whims, you E I slavish obedience 2 nd su mgs for his account, ‘who had not Ss a take ae ‘the mean | She st accompa ny mie in all my journeys, etal day ?” nora i: Oph ne of children 43 ork I mirage is 4; in ge 7 for in my + tidition a shame that a man should go about iviag with any change about him? 2 Did you ever know an om- every two marriages mber of ag aha men is | in splendour at hotels, whilst his wife is left at homes nibus cad who ithi atx sap | prey to ennui. She must not, as is the case with, most few yards of any place | within # the bills of mortality 2 2 Did married men, as 3 to 5 mber of pete, is married are pe bia. becomes female dignity, and m a quarter of a an hour, when it wanted that much of | mar ha midighe 5 Did You ever sce a pair of family snuffers | spring, a - deficient, or half an inch of the point knocked off? I ever know the same case as 7 os eae landlady who would own to bugs > éver know the Boots at an inn call you t too a for ‘the r ach ? Did you pear: know a nary bi rths pgs 65. Oneindividual only ee ins the $53 es 100 The number of births of the pany sex is to that of the female Sex as 96 t to 95. — Edinburgh Phil. Teusak condescend a age “d many a hitter o humour ‘her ge of. her m all receive 30,000 flo i oar however, at obliged ‘to spend as ma ay suit | pleasure, no: vice being more svominee than avarice ae will never be allowed to dance, because I will not 5 ny wife frisk about like an idiot. If peg have proper" : o not tell aes it was * re es a Tong | oe, “cracked before ?’’—€om Sultan —"Thg Eeipsic Gazette informs us not take it fro ey her on eacres he t must a lie ps mething about myself. seve years old, debating th to the Ginaiinabte but a: ewe judging by m my th and strength. Tam always * egenseai & orseback, in poy oe If, therefore, there exist ped aaa a han girl, that the Prussian painter Ege es afi zt —— Alt 'S portrait in Egypt, | ed ce a | roe ga ta blue fe Prassiag adhvyci ke If that Ftv, 1 Pecan at the for- do t home with an old a still hale, hearty, and active d I will go and m at an iach bok not farther, a jays ee the pablic account. I work there voluntarit , as a of honour that age gic shall be advertisem ent is said to bee: rooney, I en . it is you call it. Pp says? I find it raion to compre- ape Je iaaheen: Presi we Allambran.—The rr folk Poa the but they understand nothing at all ads of ccaieeiondion to have been taken mbrun.—l will ex son ae the ye fully, if t—It odes hn seen laden that the number of fairap et tise 2 of vet that bey gy myelin within a itt 4 ero aad. that Bi eae Seehaie Dun rat re gE JAN. 9.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 15 John Milton's Original Agreement, bargaining with Samuel Symons, in 1666, _Tegarding the copyright of are Lost,’” f Mr. R the Th P 4 d 51. at the ex d been sold. 0 copies h paid 5/. ; Seven fo api killed by eating Wheat. tag Sund last, a considerable loss was sustained b r. Infield, po F from a number of horses a at some A person who had charge of the sto ck and stopped it with some wool. It appears that at night the horses removed the wool, that they might get at the tially succeeded, when defendant, who lent, seized him by the > Heg ype him into custody. e of the most vio- ane Eee the niet from his back, e dam ew and knowle: ledge. William Pegg stated that he purchased of the P 0 cwt enny Cyclopedia of the prisoner Denny, who trbork: 1g cwt. e done was 7s.—A police- | to his shop about 14 cw: at a time, stating that he did so by orroborated the main tn Th isoper behaved with | order of the foreman. The price h ve him was between 20s, great salcone on to the station-house, he resisted in | and 30s. per cw A lad in Pegg’s employ identified Kingate, the most violent manner, and twisting one of his legs within | and stated that on the last three oceasions Denny came accu those of witness, threw him with great force into the road. | panied by him, and wit heard ny say that he was Messr: k the other polic: < ; wheat ;—twelve of vice ¥ iene violently il seven died the same day, a nd the remaining five, it ‘is feared, BANERUPTCY COURT, DEC, 29. 2 the Ma of — Burton. ake hie aS a corn- ha * very extensive eM haope tracitie with the Messr: Mark-lane, whos the corn- i nd oy all e the subject of ‘litigatio on in the Court Ju L Committ, ® Paivy CounciL. tive ts the © Wilt the tate} Aes be: Wood, B —The appe: ea Singcestey, Lb Sir eth Goodlak eal rela- Matthew Ww, The case in conse Court adjourned. LAMBETH-STREET.— ‘ampbell. ion of the examination of the prisoner, Mrs. Bailey applied to Mr. Norton for advice, under the following circumstances :—It ed that she had sailed from this country in the same ¥ the late Mrs. M‘Lean, formerly Miss Landon, on her Way to Cape Coast Castle ; that she had been present at the inquiry which took place relative to the sudden death of - M‘Lean, and had taken not pro- ceedings, as wel of the circumstances which occarre during the voyage, and subsequent residence of that ladyin Africa. On -Mrs. ley’s return to this try, she saa to the friends of Mrs. M'‘Lez Lal orem s attending her death, &c., stances which had come pst ay ough ne at latterly she had been Subjected to considerate annoyance by Be Gen en who had e fact of her having s AL doc ich tees: insisted upon her rs comply with be! names; and o} t all bec > 3 subject to ria ae h Mrs. M‘Lean as her onal servant at Portsmouth, and attended her in bens Bed iets the time of herdeath ; and that she neversaw or heard of sand Sherwood and Co. inned Monthly, price Ss. Stet nag rs os MAGAZINE OF BOLANS. « Eight Beautiful En ngs. of Flowers fally onaed aie. Nature, with Botanical Descnptions and i structions pals o-~ Cultivation. ae cope te ey ean ores costes Work, coloured in This mode of periodical payment will, it is hoped, meet the wishes pe mary, especially as by its adoption gy bea eventa- ally overtake the subscribers to the edition now in ; but a8 an inducement to those who weuuld prefer the ph i te work at ce prt ce the pri na es sets, and to offer the < com at ol. Os. instead of li. o> half. bound in Tothose who are unacquainted with the plan of this Magazine, recapitulat of its leading features, as originally troduction ‘0 po: work, may be pager ber co ots, crn the z Remsen and = of — ae nts figured ; f Cul- ; tial to pe mic eaiven. Every anand ark vobiewa introduced, if ed - Botice oe general eee is dese: sl suffici insportan * Bach Seiscker shetr Howie Calendar of the Work to be done ia each Month in the Plower Garden, including Deseriptions of all kinds of Insects which infest rane with the most efficient methods for destro: et continues te be published on tst-of se month, price 29.6@. London: Orr and Co., Amen bere R. and T. P, Caldwell, Edinbargh; and Weary and Co. Dublin. alaiia FF oe — o a 5 HE a ARTERLY REVIEW, NO x} sarees 5 ee Publish we —CONTENTS :— . In - “4 past 1, 38 coatenl w An itl. Lord | Daas * coon oe — 1¥. Rom — howmerer Jobn vail. ib ae Policy. HE CARDEN. SEAGAZENS, AND | vi. 4 preter o ESTIC IMPROVE- ME? In 8vo. Ni a dis “« Me Peat, No. 1. for January 184!, ousting he t sheets and twelve engravings, ist oidhathvad we 3 OF NO. I. :— LCo Gen Subject— —On presesvii s Panis Geouek the Wioter by Beans of ‘tee Tompacakane of Spring By A. Gorrie, F.H.S., C S., &c.—On the Application z bite’s Patent as to the Heating of — and other By. ures. . M‘Mab, Jun. —A System ¢ Plan for By W. P- icultwre—On Leycest teria formisa, as an vu ndergrowth for d Food of Game, and as a Sea-Breeze Plant. By jculture.— Notice of a Petuniaof extraordin aaty Dim jon. - B— Bo crash ical, Floricaltural, and Arboricualtoral pence of Kinase of Plants newly introduced bere British Gardensand Plan- tations, —On the Cultare of Ixias other Iridew in the Island of Jersey. By Bernard elt: iy Horticulture. —On the Cultivation of the Pine-apple, as prac- tised in the Kitchen-Garden of the Palace of Versailles. By M. assey, Director. General of the Gardens of the Crown. On the Itivation of the Grape Vine. Dy Mr. Dancan.—Op the De y yon F. Antoine. The Conifer fter Lambert, Loudon, and others.—The Eastern Arboretam, or Kural Register of all the remarkable Trees, — Gardens, &c., in the vier Gregory * ang By James Grigor.—Fowld’s, Young’s, an sery Catalogues.—Ricauti’s Rustic Architect ‘ecture. Srscrutaxeo us INTELLIGENCE.— General apse ate — Retrospective Cri Sen cletee and Answ The § Second Series of the Gardener's Magazine in six E vchemie,: with 690 engravings, may be had of all be see price 6/. 8s. 6d. ny volu number may be had s rs nted for the Author, and sold Lonens and Co., London; ind A. and C. Black, Edinb: in cr. BvO. 4s. Od. bd. with 220 | Diagramme ‘engraved for the work, UCLID'S ELEMENTS OF NE GEOMETRY ; with an war gag Appendix, and Supple- mentary Propositions for Exercise. Hae for the bys of Schools, or for Seif. Teewedhens | By W. D.C y, A.B., author of the ” be ad of a and Infand Sosuvery: ad “This = the best of the Elements which has yet a a." —Atheneum ; weet oy * brevity, clearness, and # Sche @ og onetion . the wants of learners, cannot be easily surpassed.” —Dudtin Univer sty Yee mali volume, price 5s. AXT 0 ‘N° s ous Ee BOTANICAL In — it —_ be called an Seoareve clopsedias, w when the co press a great variety of of information into one volume, roa order rod bring it within the means o A emery of < ww is so po ae fle aught, it is e tere Ae je that the Gardener, and those co = with his Aue = opm should ae com: ed as other ch this particular. No Such, work peep ta tt a Saye. le yr on its value will be at once apparent; since it combines ae ound essential features of Catalogue, a Horticultural every agent or friend. of meee ture, —_ Dictionary - cage th — sable. 3, Bond FOr & Co 1 Pte 0 st rae was publis a od, Tustrated with Sabentegn No. 0 s the FBO = aoc and OURN NY ° (Being aSecond Series of the Botanical Miscellany,) By Sir Ww. J. Seems 594 K.H., LL.D., F.R.A. & L S. boas Spaihia of Botany in the University of Glas; ker's in Ceylon, Mr. ir ae Botany ; Report of 3 M. G ‘ea- for the suppl inten preparing Mr. Cuming’s Natural History Travels Seen bes By "Philippine iguam with ——S rest * his ‘2D. ~~ lemoir of the late lamented B ay blished in —s Numbers, price 2s. 6d. each, Co., and W, Pamplin, pees London M'‘Lachlan f all Booksellers. A 2, DUKE-STREET, SOUTHWAR : The Nobility and Gentry are poe Netti for Em nigra pra either ‘sik or Buntia, in every variety. ed with Flags for Pv oe he Dinners, ane a Orders by Post, aadrese sed 2, Duke. st vark. A Warehouse at 208, Piccadilly. "0 SOuTEMEN AND Seer WANiED, by a Mippne-aGep Man, who as GARDENER. T satis! Character and Abilities, on tego to his late Employer, with ‘apwards of addressed 4 Middlesex, vwsilk be attuned immediately. whom he was. — Letters D.M., te Jast Published, Part Ist, price 2 + LANTAS HARTW EGIANAS IMPRI- MIS eas, ADJECTIS NONNULLIS = HAMIANIS, enume vasque describit GEOKGIUS BEN, chee Sec. Soc. Lis. hed: ws mplin, 55, Frith-street, and 9, Queen-street, Soho. " te and all Booksellers. ae TMPORTANT BOT ANIC AL AND HOR. TICULTURAL RES mh ese - RIDGWAY, Pic. ers and to be was of fall Boo —_. DR. LINDLEY’S SOTANICAL pees ER: or, d Shrubbery. Publishing the First tor ok ante Ez ber wegen finely-coloured Por. Set and Shrubs grown in this countr imnepennea by their History, Treatment ip Cultivation, Propagation, &e., aps rer se sefal tific, and literary information. Each Volum may im had rately. «,* All the numbers wh f reprinted, 2. LADIES’ BOTANY. By Dr. Liv DLRY "Bait seated tae Botani. cal Register, Fossil Fiera of Great Britain, ‘Ke. 4th Edit. 2 vols, év¥o, with pad basen ete Be Plates, finety colour 5s. each, “We oe it quite needless to recommend this Work; it, must find its way int ah oss of ev y jc ind it petro nian Seca pocket of e ng garde —G N.B. aeons - ehis Nesaritel Work, ilantrated wi Wood. e engravings, for the Use of Schoo!s and Young Persons in hee wn gemma price 12s. bound in cle oth. LEY ERTUM ORCHIDACEUM, a Wreath of Cpudansonen Flowers. To be pan it) the aon a Parts, at 25 a Fwd ured. Subscribers are re. spectfully arene that Part ow ready for delivery. Part H OF THE VEGETATION OF With Coloured yaa. Toge. wenty-three volumes of Edwards’ Botani egister. 5. Second nm. e” volume, I S¥o, with Eig coloured Plates, 2ts, rds. DR. LENDLEY'S ROSARUM ONOGRAPHIA; or, a Botanical Hist of Roses. To whi of tors, in which the > eb and 15 ce. &c., Profe Parts, price 1/ 6d, 7. THE FOSSIL FLORA ‘or GREAT te igy' ws Pi and Kn a of the Vi emains found in State in bsp Country. By G WILLIAM Ts rg Britain; arra nged according to the an a rder +e ‘we Pry Bu: eye bed = addition of the Lin ; ee en ol ee ae seg and Ord the Colour of the Flow he ae nao rg down to fo the te time. B Grorcr Dox r. P.S. The only Complete Catalogue of Plants without Seapen ments. 9. Sixth Edition, in one large octa me, 16¢. cloth b: SWEETS ae CULTIVATOR ; ; sing fall Practical Instructions for the Management of all ants cultivated in Hothouses, G ses, st ‘scion in the Gar dens of Great Britain ; with Plain Directions = the sty ement of Balbs an By Rossar Swart, F.LS.- - —— what Mr. Swe as said on the Culture of worse and Epiphyt a the ast Battion 7) his Botanical Cultivator, may o cS considered ~ the ge te Sony this subject for the British Gar~ — rdener's Mugaz' dener.""—-Gar, we ye eae Serer t Tees HE FLOWER- GARDEN ; its Cultives! jon and General Arrangement: with — Lists of the carefully arran: eight, Colonies and Time of Flo _— te by twelve elcgantly prmeeier ts of Flowers, @ ight Views and Plans of Garden "of the goss and b C.HS. iistrated hd ee, en and p 5 illus’ ists of Varieties worth caltivating. BC CHas. Sr bere .C.H. Iliustrated by teen Groups of th t choice Fruits, coloured after Nature, and numerous engravings on wood. A aah pare in small Svo, price 19s. 6d. ocket. Volume, price 2s. cloth, lette red and gilt, TERY L ‘DY HER OWN FLOW ER-GARDENER. jee for the Pe dh and — only. By Third Edition, mach impro Lonion: W S. Orr and Co. 12] <3 Be he oster-row. LEET STR i F GAR Nurnbers, just pab- ON GA PUBLISHED BY Witla een a i xe = LADIES: MAGAZINE O ING. y Mrs. rome In Monthly Royal 8vo, with catoured Ph e First Number is hed, Price Ere 0. I., price 1 RTICULTURIST: sea _ be Somber. —Nearly ready, wi A wag THE LADIES" COMPANION TO THE. FLOWER. GARDEN. — an Alphabetical Arrangement of all the Oriamenas Plants y grown in Gardens and Shrubbe rP wen 7 for their Culture. By Mrs. iv pf en xoaig sie as ee THE LADIES’ FLOWE8-GARDEN OF 20 eee Lovnon. Te: Number ge BULBOUS PLANTS. By ior Three Plates, demy 4to size, comprising Fi te! A By Mrs. Loupon. ye beautifully coloured Plates, containing upwards of Three dred Figures of the most showy and interesting * anaal Flows Printed by Messrs. Raatsury and Ev. ments \Fleet-street, in the Precinct of Whitefriars, oe ioe City of dow, and Published by them at ae eatin conan ARLES- Sores exnseh. in the County of Middlesex, where’ all . ee and Communications are to be cio the: , January * 184. z : on hah att i“ : j THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. A STAMPED NEWSPAPER OF RURAL ECONOMY AND GENERAL NEWS. THE HORTICULTURAL PART EDITED BY PROFESSOR LINDLEY. Ne. 2: PROSPECTUS OF ft GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE; indle; = pg is admitte dt to be better understood in an Titain y other country, : and the ar? of works on the tro’ n Ho cain of existence, or - oe number more are interested in the Avago ere part of the domes- tic establishment fe e pers afford the expense. No one will, therefore, t the sevhstige which may de- rived from the scuathinneatee a Journal conducted in an honest and liberal spirit of good-willto all, who are engaged or interested in Horticulture and den Botany, and who will thus havea cheap means of intercommunication on professional subjects. The plan proposed to be followed in tof THe $s to form a constant assist- Domestic Correspondence sof Horticultural Exhibitions ho: hat as concerns veget PHYSTOLOGIGAL IN SOMES. and all those interesting topics which elucidate the harm nature, and 3 dependence of the various parts of the c h on the other, will also form 0! peculiar feature will be the introduction of inform tion relating to FORE, STING, or AB ORICULTURE. This is one of the most important s to which the attention of one i be directed; for itis often little unders by t jon to practi: alth amou ra what circam are to be ascribed the great inferiority i posh of fe oni same spe- cies grown in different pl , are all points to which attention will be given. Wes deavour to collect information in hat very important much-negle subject, the diseases acc’ tal, as well as to convey the earliest notices of t! new species, which promise to increase either the beauty or value of dland pr hi ant, ti nig oo -_ cycidnd bre BE STATED WEEKLY IN THE DAR, ugh it is no upy oO the Pr ag of AGRICU LTURE, oe as : Gardening i i the } parent. & possible, even if it wer to ited ime modes Ip SECOND P pe e shall introduce that description of domestic and political agin se is usually found a a weekly Paper. We consider it eeeces sary to dwell on this head further than to say, that we do not intend to range the to that they have already es of f contributions fom great numbers of ane : among whom the following may be m Professor Henslow, of Cambridge Sir W. J. Hooker, of Glasgow | The Hon. and Very ay meee W. Herbert, LS et: of Panne es Ronee King’s Coll leg. George Barker, Esq., Birmingham G. Bentham, bea 'S Secretary Hectennens re of the | =~ = ago ae Greville, "Baiban iE Mri ton, Gardener tO the Duke of Mz, Bailey. Gardener rch. Devo. ork Mr. M‘Intosh, re Mr. » ener to th —— aie eof | of Buccleugh. r. Ah . tothe Duke of ~~ — Gardener to the Duke of ortlan M Buches arse “10 Lord Bagee r. Bue! an, enerto i oe ell, Gardener to Lord (Exertan. ete lisle Mr nidingthdi, Gardener to Sir fastener to Siz oberon ae Epaxter. of the Botanic Garden at 4 rs ee ee a oreo Garden Curator of the Regent’ pe $ the Bor ee, ate oF the i s- Shepherd. Dub — Botanic Garden ai ~ ic Gar- | M at ppleb, to T.. Brock. lehurst, sq. ™lalifs peustes, of Hope House, near Mr: Perria, of Aighbargh M serymen, Gardeners, and all other persons in. in Hertionttural pursuits, ices invited to favour t carly le With aint men eg upon subjects of tee 3, —— Street, Ss be apumaped SATURDAY, JANUARY 9, 1841. RANUNCULUSES, ANEMONES, GERANIUMS, AURICU LAS CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, YELLOW PICOTEES, & PINKS. GROUSE, Ww: ent Florist to Her M gs to recommend the poten of the = bility, Gentry, and a his extensive rate of the Flowers, which he offer at very rate prices. He a also a — stock of Lilium ge Catalogues can be forwarded by po: panctatum and album application HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT WATER. a pe bbe & Co., HITECTS, &c., GLOU- CE R PLACE, KING’S ROAD, CHELSEA, Hothouse Builders and Hot Water ‘Apparatus Manufacturers, beg » and Horti- re ma’ mproved principles. stock of Forcing Frames, Glazed nights, and other Horticultur: kep' Apparatus, which is kept in action, is upon thi mple and 2 eget mcd aggre References may be had and r thei ‘orks ts. Lawrence’s, rotonk, Park ; ; aan Hendersons, Pine-a open Nursery, Edgewar Gai 's Nursery, Battersea; Mr. Knight’s Nurse ay C ; Mr. " esate Nursery, Chelsea ; of E. Fauster, Esq., Clewer. Lodge, Windsor; Sir Edmund Antrobus, Cheam; and at tone seers Man ufactory, Gloucester-place, Chelsea, nea Sloa cx fACK, SON, and OLIVER, Nursery and eedsmen, New Cross, Surrey; Bedford Conservatory, Covent Garden, London; and Deansgate, Manchester, em- b tlemen, and bat gj to their extensive Stock of American Plants, Evergreen d Flowe ering Shrubs, Fo! x Fruit- trees, a Ra standard, bei Nurseries, situate 'as above, on the great Dover Road; to e persons are co. onveyed in 1 minutes by “the Croydon Rail. from the t ral Im- — signe: he ie ited .— s of i. best quality and most eei ‘vinds: and Turnip weaee of excellent sorts, sa’ the] late Mr. George Sinclair), C., S., aon QO. having ammo the extent of 22,000 career pops? ro greatest success, N.B. The Embankm d Slopes of several Railways have been rendered more se: oh te consequence of a close matted sward being early Leh co Hy admixture of Grass-Seeds obtained from their establish OT WATER APPARATUS FOR HEATING HORTICULTURAL BUILDINGS, ee haan HOUSES, and Stig Socom m improved prin- ected by DANIEL and | SLBORN E. BatLey-having devoted much time to the considera- w ience in the erection of the honour to be Society of London in executing erected at Chis- D. and etal all descriptions of Horticu tivity Buildings and Sashes, and invite noblemen, ried and as ~~ to an ins: ion of their various drawings ‘2, Holborn, where they have the opportunity of tin: ongst other metal works, an extremely nae and convenient kitchen apparatus, a range, adapted for con supply of hot water, and Pea be of th ny oven we than a hitherto been brought before the Eecrat D. sand & . BAILEY e first to introduce metallic near houses to horticalturst, and an refer to the Coneersens re eregt to the ne of their —— besides many thers in this eon ‘the Continen HE GREAT CHATSWORTH CONSERY. TORY.—One of the most ee antes t features in the nat ted of this magnificen nservator en ea A new mode = id beauty of a; the: rison iti ecessary heat and the transmission of light, the work at Chatsworth m: = safely prononnced. to bean pargor ade of the most perfect sys Hortic: ges Giazin: yd that nea regen o OSEP DRAKE, 6, Jerm pring t, d_ 180, rdgeware-n road, coer, to sar bets the exeention eg ong chan’ worth Glaziug was intrusted, is honoured by his Grace the Duke of Devonshire’s entire approbation of the manner in which it has completed ; which’ approbation his Grace has been pleased ea y building for Glass sha Weds of ‘Glazing which have been so Agha yed at Chatsworth, hi serfs ae the kind permission. ‘of M 3 Parton, sake whose judicio basi » applicati m by Teter, addressed to Jam BRITISH SHEET-GLASS for HORTICULTURAL PURPOSES. CELEMEN. Bsn vangressaiec cys Sgn), ermyn- ns ; large quantities of for Lights Houses Saetite 1 sot id. punctually ex: cuted upon the lowest “Window Lead, Solder, Putty, Prepared: and eyery requisite for Garden Glazing.’ Price 6d. — “mp VEGETAB applic ol Ri Roses, Fruit ie Trees, oe dead Catalogue = Trees sand Shru rae 4, Gre Ssell-street, Covent Garden, w N’ and SUPERB SHOW theta ed, pak the three classes; and in saat ho ale noone e eeu office order will be desirable with the rder.—Address to T. Connelly, Florist, Lancas wed ONE DOZEN. SEEDS 0 e above Plant first which have Tr yet reac’ An Banks: have been left bag ‘Mr. Schomburgk in ie Be eee of W. Pamplin for — yas ne Guinea each.—Apply at 9, Queen-street, Soho-square LOPES, from the best Paper, -_ well m: sill 2 oH 28 < o ES a Q Strand, opposite Catherine-st © Som soaseenee E IGHT-KEYED iter FLOR with German sive, bot ogets ae at ee ~~ made 7 the principle e. two f th fessors, N N and Liat price 2/. 12s. ba. Speer I Flute is tested, aa sre entre: r sale unless ~ to possess the eleme: f true musical peer theen namely, volume of tone, mellow, vocal, and brilliant, combin ieige pod of power, accuracy of intonation, bony’ Fray of ps ing. At 4 aren 4 Ly *s re Sele ser trand, ear to Somerset Ho ig Catheri oe ADVANCES, in — rere from 102. to pee dre Soya granted to ectable Persons of ei oe e rai forty-eight hours, if the Sureties —A he ene al @akaee ae LIFE se ANCE and LOAN COMPANY, 5, Frith-street, Soho—daily Nine till Nine. \ ANTS a SITUATION as a GARDENER in a NOBLEMAN or GENTLEMAN’S FAMILY, a bps cr Man, 34 years of age, a Native of Scotland, who has had experi: Can heap ters 3 oe or — wired — Avan herein cg Ss GA ARDENER and BAILIFF, or to Superintend the pipet _ DRAINING, pal FLAMING of oa GROUND. If an exte only. The i matory Suter e will bes po Be pane in - want of a person of rtp sheen centtigtion. Letters addressed A.R., tage bcos maga Portland-place, will meet with im- mediate Beinn, EDGINGTON, ~ MARQUEE and MANUFACTURER to the Horticultural DUKE-STREET, SOUTHWARK, and G are The Nobility fully informed, that BEN- JAMIN EDGINGTON has on SA for the ensuing Season, an nsive STOCK of MARQUEES and TENTS, admirably adapted for Horticultural and Floricult: Societies, Archery Meetings, Cricket Clubs, Public Dinners, Fetes, and Fancy Fairs, as they effectually resist wet, po! le, easily erected and > ay be had of any dimensions. A t variet’ uees, Tents, and Rick-Cleths, with Poles, &c., complete, N and econd-hand, for Sale Hire. Netting and Buntin for Fruit Trees; Ar ats, Tulip Covers, Sun Blinds, &c. Tents for Emigrants to New Zealand and the Colonies. Flags and Banners, either Silk or Buntin, in every variety. Rooms deco- ii rated with Flags for P: Sean Dinners, Ba ps: &e. addressed 2, Duke-st., Southwark. A Warehouse at 208, Piccadilly. Will be published, on the Ist of February ne next, by M Mr. GrorcE Mitts, F.H.S., Gardener to the Baroness de Rothschild, ‘Acton, Middlesex, A ‘cc Cre Sot on the CULTU zs of MELONS UMBERS on TRELLIS, in his IMPROVED rie oreur Sea-Kale and Asparagus arty also be noticed. Te aulsbea by Smith, 113, Flect-street; Curry, Dublin —_— Edi — of March, 1841, will be publis! Wats CAL 1 TREATISE ON THE CULTURE OF CUCUMBERS al pag proving by epevionct ili ior the Table, not only every R CULTIVATION in Pits, Dung- ag and pa Ground, by —s a AYRES, to John Dobede, Esq., capt 2, Cam vorsdigcghiniees aided by a iy, who has been a successful ystem epwards of thirty pears. ”“Subseribers Names received by Sherwood and Co., 23, P. oster-row, London ; Stafford Shetioet s ;andallother Shockedtienn: BOTAN h, price 29s. srithiaendlinespinall onesie i = fhe — OLLE. Just published, in rake ean EGETABLE "gucaNoukr escription of S Of Bes y wh rai oro get aa oA spirited transiation of lebrated work, very elegantly gotten «an ble addition to the botanical library.” —Lit.Gaz “Wem ngty recommend bse work toali our readers cet have a taste for plants, peg especially to all young gar- deners.”—erdeners’ Maguzin “We have already strongly recommended this work to the scientific er. Thet ator deserves very great praise for undertaking so sie ea wae te Yi . (3a ice}. * This edition uthor’s most 2 @ ntary ceamae: Houliston and Stoneman, 65, Paternoster-0¥ j | Houl, ston and Hughes, 154, Strand; and all Booksellers " highly i wing ves GARDENERS’ CHPOR TUE: = a, wit 250 250 Hluatratichs, s Ol [N° 9. ORISTS. This day is published, No ¢: apne 6d,, embellished with a FPAMILIAR ASTRONOMY. By G Gponce Dauey, Now w Ready, a. m ‘yamo, 2 A.B., Author c 2 System of Popular Geometry, &c. 12mo, RINCIPLES or “GEOLOGY ; 3; or, the Modern | with Ep cart vings, 5s. oth h, lettered a ts co sores Plate of Goldham’s Emperor (Tulip), from a Dra Changes of the Earth and i = Inhabitants Considered as here is a vast de: edt of rnstronorsieal information conveyed in ¥ “+ Lay Illustrative of Geology. bod Cass brew, Esq., F.R.S. ost winning ole anassuming manner in this delightful little | "P.HE FL RISTS’ AND AMATEURS’ GUIDE.Y John Mur: Aibemarle-street. baal whieh, it less "7 the novelty of its plan than the Guide will be published the first and third turday in on the taste and | every Month; and m pe had nd Satur extent of its intelligence, reflects infinite credit o! a of nd iema Warner and Warner, ts all Bookseller, accession to the libr Io as 8vo, price 1s. 6d. nts of its projector and editor, Mr. Darley.—S a + n ry.— Sun, April 5, 1830. Corsi Mr. Lake, Bishopsgate-street; and of ants ebclamey po! EU pagel heee the Tayk a a. Pooksehers and Publishers to University Newsmen. grams illustrating the Me eh en the Enuncia- | ggiiege, 23, U ower er mmunications to be addressed to J. Wakeling, 5. Royal. tions, aent separately for use in ae Class- street, Walworth. Whittaker and Co., Ave Maria- puee, London. Han Seay ag TELE, AND oO; aamge pagy Bas &e. If sent by post, the postage of > Lordon : ‘Thomas Kelly; Simpkia, Marshall, and Co. ; “—— ‘oes Printed ‘i the Author, and sold by William Smith, 3, Fleet-street, and all Booksellers. CTURE, ler fae Wetaned loured 5.¢-THE GARDENERS’ MAGAZINE, AND REGISTER OF RURAL AND DOMESTIC Phe woe ath gmbmakd in Monthly Deaan ai vO, Is. 6d. each ; yearly volumes. Pri of cond Series, 1334 to 1340, gt tam in besa: Boise gravings, 100 of them of the size of the Ars ag it. Ss. Gd. « olume or number may be had separatel *,* The “ Garden wtbe ibecatine ey bE tent ky pow, ix pre- paid, for 6d. postage ; and hence any person who does not take it in regularly, but who may wish for an ap val ¢ 1, » plai: al. ; | Teceive it under a pre- } enclosing 2s. to the Conductor or the Publishers. “Phe ners’ Magazine’ shoul perused by every gar- pai f | dener and by every gentleman.”’—Times. | 6—WATERTONS ESSAYS ON NATURAL HISTORY, t vol. about ti 0 four s pias of ‘ “Belgium: Scenery’ (No. I,.of th and ny 150 royal 8 of letter-press. The cubsertion is 2s, pain and the work is oh a by all bookseller: wR and | Zz Chro: f AREEY'S eee ENTIFIC LIBRARY, for the ie : of Sch ools, Private Students, Pees and M It is the purpose of this Work to furnish a Treatises el liga mei Science, adapted publi ic a one To yo of either but to their shortest form. A SYST EM OF POPULAR GEOMETRY. Grorcs Dar. Cc LAR GEOMETRY. In the Elements of Abstract Science are fatniliarisev, ilustrated, : endered practically useful to the various purposes of Life, with nunehiont $s Cuts. 4s. ores eloth. 3. ¥ Sa with a Section on d Edition. 4s. Gd. cloth. TR Y, both Plane oga ri hms, and theap- 5S cond Edition. em i a ley’s Popular Geometry and Algebra.’ Li ior emei as Doral Rrowiedge,. ae “* Mechanics.” Taylor and Wa or n, Eiays and Publishers to University College, 28, Uppe $. Siig: olume, price 1 XTON’S. “POC KET BOTANICAL DICrIONARY. In “Ha at pe A called an age of Cyclopzedias, when the com- pressio: oan variety of oe into one volume, in order to bring te within the mea S of all ranks, is 90 nie versally it is ev saeatiy irable that the Gardener, and ioe Pe Me ith his profession, should be peiet com: id ee classes in this ae No such work existing, however, prior t the present publication, * its wales will at ae apparent; omaee it combines the more essential features of a Botanical Catalogue, a Horticultural cription, it is especially -_ Floriculturist ; who may, by catry- e all the plants bet are re any time every intel pel as to every agent or friend of horticulture, th ne pica anetenass A = deci: pnidledias be dispensable. iw 4 London: J. Andrews, Bond-street; Orr & Co., Pat noster-row i BOTANICAL WORKS recently imported MPLIN, 55, Frith street, and 9, Queen-treet, Soho Square, Prom. Madraé=: —WIGHT, Dr. ROBERT—ICONES PLANTA- RUM "INDIE ORIEXTALIS, or Figures of Indian Plants. Part x¥i., which concludes the first vol. ., 68. each. 3 WIGHT, Dr. ROBERT.— ILLUSTRATIONS OF INDIAS — P Author's ez ae bon - . 2 BOT A or Figures of Indian Plants described in the “ Prodromus Flore Peninsul Indi: entalis.”? Part Xiile ba ch ch concindes the first vol., 7s. Gd. we York. — TORREY AND Cats FLOBA oF which c es the ast each = From Paris—MORICAND, STEPHEN. — PLANTE VELLES 0U RARES DERIGTE. Part i. 10s. cach a Mogi. TANDON.—CHENOPODEARUM ONOGR. ENU- MER! ATIO B.—OTIA HISPANICA, SEU DELECTUS rule TARUM” RARIONUM PER HISPANIAS SPONTE NASC! TIUM. Partsi. and ii, 9s. i : WEBB, P| —iITER HISPANIENS! Synopsis of Plants ¢ estes t » She Southern Provinces of Spain and Portugal, 3% any.—STEUDEL, Dr. ¥_ NOMENCLATOR BO- mous. "SEU SYNONYMIA PLANTARUS vensee ENUMERANS NO VINA Ep bee SyNonTHA, . Edina nova, parts i. to vi., 2s. Ty “co 2 ee ARUM LINK, KLOTZSCH, ~B —ICONES PLANT: RARIORUM HORTI REGH woTantcr BEROLINENSIS. 7 eaclt. i. and ii. 38. 9d. each, or with the plates highly coloured, 55- ENDLICHER, STERHEN. —GENERA PLANTARUM. Patt xvi., 45. 3d. each SCHLEC WTENDAL, Dr. D.F.L.—LINNA, EIN JouRyAE FUR DIE BOTANIK IN [HREM GANZEN UMFANGE bag? We Pamplin’s devout te Botanica wit I 5 3 euitaral Books may be had on Ma pene El: grappeementaigneccernigeee JAN. 9. ¥ 19 HORTICU LTURAL SOCIETY Uniiatiena soba cqueeet UCT | Be fo. more i N EN. an the som tated ; 4 yore! ueeany crvam, that the e THREE EI EXUIBITIONS a of Engtish teak stated and indeed the value ar hay from the first cuttin $3 produced Saturdays, viz.—May 15, June is" and piace on the following | of the country; in some district erent parts & P ced by the mother ons are r nte e- es from Ps hey ssi seldom as lati ar atg , and July 10. ‘The p nted Ri o 97. per load; icts it now ® fetch from 8i. 0g pay t ld atreen: j ecient Re, by psp ny on application a t this Office. y ¢ Lond Kenm a Sagi oe South of Ir or md on the estate 3 " “mg es gh cig afterwards produced. ad sciaiuiad sedans ainagmiranenemaconee-tanatenin llarney, it rea 102. ae exciting the roots hy means of ; = AVERAGE, PRICE OF BARK FOR early in the Sprin paige s of a strong heat Che Gardeners’ Chronicle. Sinrnhs Grigrins [Shieh takt sat area SEDI TING aEY tea. Dutch Bark sold for. *5 44 10 per Ton. | 5 vuking rs Oe pa ear Mas 28 two or three ? NU 2 9, 1841. 1892. — Feber ; : ~ —6 ae | Thas, it is found thea ¢ ie ain their original character. MEETINGS IN THE ENSUIN dais oa — cha Fae RN ae - = good fi owers | are obtained with the rs § Zoological. ...+----- Bhp. —..Ger i lh i ea I ta = OM? after striki termed Lae aap tent Kepal Bocinic are patie 3 = 1834. Dutch ditto eee. : : = i ww — ing ( : by he trade pot- roots) ; planted out - — ‘German ditty °° Tete ort . That in wet Procecins again request the attention of our readers to the va Seealial F 7 ig poe gids occ [NOM A m wet seasons manure is frequently very in- roceedings of the Swansea and Neath Horticultural tie eons eee es Hee 16:6 ce yk thus to produce but. few fi ociety, as reported in our Ano —_ B fae eee ges OR Se sora os BR — | seasons, it is equally benefic owers; while in very ary the improvement of the oe this society 1838) Dutch ditto ines ap peice mening Pr Peay ( Magee I ‘ebange of “sol, than Aa ite Much moi ze depends o bs been regarded as one ey rege important ‘obj 184) German ditto . be ¢ . . ehg 4 os ° "” es oe and suality ; ich its means: could bea applied ; mist aor 88 1830, English Growth. from plants growing in brick rubbish. its effor ts have Oak Bark sold for 5. That wat 1831. Ditto ditto - | + 710 to8 OperRood. ater is a point which cannot be too much a vation_of vegetables has — i832. Ditto _ ditto 2 UP Cag ee ttend- oa y arisen; in addition to | 1833+ Ditto ditto : Sci! fae gmeallgvamiciies but more depends on the manner in which Saltivated tage-gardens are now seen 183%. Ditto —_ ditto ee oe : —-7 Oe — pled, cs one | or two good wate ch it is ap- ed with taste, andes Bape: aie nett = ose # oft : —-66 — ae yoo pet much ig than apainey the ay ellings, and in ate as 1297. Ditto ditto rete Re 3 6 a is but too common a eet oot which bi § wher fi 1838. ; ai Sos ee a That . nt rothnbtr oil nla: re ormerly ‘aialoeat! ine, to say the least, ps 1839. — — ‘ 49— ; & =_ ) has Pindar, in sagt pes smoencinttey afcer a art ; 4 _- 1s n We regard this fact as one that deserves th AVERAGE PRICE OF HIDES: FOR ale PAP roots dying during P> ai e tao eg cause of so seriou e e ndit Sy jorebige of the managers of enn 183! Weighing from 86bs. to Lia ibe, : 3 to Hy per Ib, | Femem Sparta young ;Dablacgrower always = les, man ne ” ” 2 os | no in all parts f the ki Jeobes hr cae and b benevolent | 1833. ms 5 ” » ithe . — rules for judging new Dahlias by, las fo nina pial hime pail . In order improve the | 183. it 9 = erate he 3 —43 -— res re ry ‘diseppoin ntment consequent on oun is to give 1835. * a os Fae, Fees him a more powerful motive for spending his } Me ss = a es ae: — | Dablias.—Jehu. _. cre from pew and expensive dorts of home than for wasting itabroad ; for if ng 4 Eck: mp KS Se > (83°28 = |aneases eiiiaeed pea git at ng Publiehooe i ae eaege oy, 8 =8 =} te st MODE 6 OF PROPAGATING THE PINK. pation, and not only hiss at home he must have an occu- 1830, Ci ; "Tanned Hides. ¢. = oo Ns. Ge Lik, bids fair to render it much more abundan of life and his slen mean — to: his habits . Crop Hides — = ar cige. a e. A. . = — it has hitherto been. The us’ ee soa he can 1832. 2 — pa" re uch time and : . understand, and which leads to some ulterior eadily | jess. it ” 2-1 5 — | made it an expensiy = -_ ion, and con To eultivat nirantag ” P to get a fair stock e'the piece of ground heidi His a bg vi 35 és - - Es = be ensuing season ; and after all the time and for E oi 4 ” i a — rimming, coverin, labour 1836. ” _ eh g with hand. carry with it ifs own indeoment ht at “y ay be yal £ to | 1837. a ” » ? as A a tion paid to shade them from glasses, — atten- : in th it is often coupled | 1835- at ” eS ay frequently happen: on ae rman that he "hieahan shin, of labour, and. of | 190. * “4 eke por eglect, whilst pre er coraO a of an hour’s not know what es his gan work, Besides. ville dues Os 3 — | upon the glasses, without a tesibeaktiner ta sertea at oan — — pares ri _it will be seen from the abore, th g sigs ei | — iiss oy : ee 225 | . 5 has raised it, or in what op — Se wigan” re betes d more than a half-pen mny 6 ae likbe Hat gical Gardens at this’ place, all my men were ‘merely as they are, in the most A means, such | ing the sever ore period that glasses, if I had | reine are difficultion aie todos ts oe Pag het | ie os ottsgr rerapee the s ean ee a a a eer bestow on ack Bh cone ta kom pieeriet hr 5 ith regard to decorati ve oved, the d eles rly | amongst ‘anxious, 4, having gained a ston in t o = eater a is the the ‘svt entirely with the tanners, and i is used by then ss anf of my fa sone Aeia ite Boke “5 pt bir esa ill only take place when apes and ir | could; I therefore procured easily as 1 possibly’ : “a fae Pee, 2 me is end one hand ane procured as many cu : Be ated eed , tapers rand “eg | ud took E86 obaeisc ok pega ee oe reat, the mere raising + malas ily onopolies may, no doubt, be te in ca that article. | ground, as the onl sas propagating them in the open his mind, and, -fatlirsee les will produce that effect undertakings, benefiting the communi eat | had many years b es ee eee coe ower. | : es ae gees iq his feelings require to be upon ooo c is; which -caamot pasa roel such as Somiitie: ogg een aware that shortening, 0 or any way" of in his humble ae afte RS to be proud nbination of sat bat _w P ~yegg! ga in to kirske, was Pink, previously to putting it ans of inciting him to exertion. - ’ most easy of : re | me, at (somethin ing after cultural. societies afford pati The prizes of horti- viduals, by preventing fair competition, or hing fw ie Vine) ioe) it I doubled up the lower my pn “of. ip ould the 1 by Ye sensible of the value of such one no per- | hoves all ye radon. public evils, and it be- | me to ce Poker . © ave been arri ¢ of such results as those jured by them to co oa else e cee atee ; | than English fat: Sais by Mr. Vivian. aud his friends a a dag ery means in their power. a | soil much firmer than is ual facility, I made the j gladly lend their heir pow oan tat certain they would hop such of your. r eS : . ner of piping. I do not use @ aoe sec by: working a 80 good local } tural so- unit with heir knowledg ey = Nee y ger; 7 the bate eerare oraged with, but | tay Es a op We--therefore e me bia. Aedesvouytag to undermine, and nd | upon the surface of the soil, and so- elimina ‘ them and of the Soper cats of the consideration of w, 80 injurious a plan of imposition, sites, trom de fxmness o-ehe pamntbtnees aa _ We shall lend our own humble society in to clip round the end of the fre oh with compelled 1 to ; d before. E CULTIVATION ‘ COCKSCORE. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. Far: 2. 20 ‘ as the plan’ re about two inches aboy “4 bea m’s assistance, cee evidently force the — into a | Sean of the ere brought fruit, as in mild sea. prom, they os be pottet ied into eval a -sized | precocious growt in other words, would cause a flow not a appea ring o su uffe r in the leas! st from bee ‘teas pots when: er the Bz appear o have nearly of sap, greater than wo ould be the corresponding Rages dae for | perature ties ag, , they s| acelk b i for the well- | Glout morceau, enh Diel, Marie Louise ewes Colmes, a size sige pe ; for as m a of the success of growing t! toms | — ng of the * gars Indeed air is so indispe nsably neces- | and many others all of which were in the same state of bets be aieao upon = paying proper attention to their | sary, that w thout : a bea per _ of it, during the | fo ir blossoming ; the only varieties that a ny other bacon their man nagement, hole of their growth, the plants, instead of being of a | appeared to mate in iness wi = a © aed deal lepends the keeping dw bushy | growth, will be what. i is S deneally inoue’ Crasenne ead the Winte ter Cras: of ght, anda proper degree of heat in the ene ade Fate oh by sty of ponies up,” which will not only detract from their fine | common “Ai sors known in in Spates as ot bes means be allowed to get t cold 3 ot be appearance, but will likewise prevent the flowers from = urré. orien ley a aioe ae r is remarkable easily i inju ured, proper size. duci 4 asa than a wall ; to burn their roots. Too much heat to their roots can Whenever it is found that the bed is much decayed, its origin i is hy g =" sere 7 the pots, the parent tree ly ak 60 th ing in tl b i d i ffici ne k new one, as it will be found that making a of I ged, little or m t will, in the end, be attended with less trouble ma this I have used saw-dust ; old - continually applyi g linings to an old one. decayed tan would however answer just as well. en are should also be a at ~ ee to have it i ject to h he pl of a dwarf growth, they | the pots clean and sweet n fact, wer the pots are should be kept as near as possible to the glass; never | the better. The mould in a pots oni never be allowed allowing them to be more than a few inches from it.|to get very dry. Pot: s of the size called sixteens will be The most proper roper degree of atmospheric heat I con- sufficiently large for the veri shifting. sider to b To sum up in a few ords 5 ; 3 the” success of growing weather, wiah plenty of ryseveiny & leg. in the day; b p whenever oe atmosphere is dull and cloudy, it is ‘ch eet them nett mi ild bottom heat, plenty of air, plenty better to give -a little ai plenty of water, with as of the bei feos: rs ing higher in the day ‘than during a night. A high temperature, without the benefit of the much li ght as pos- in the bed.— we pny aay of room between the plants A, Saul, Lancaster,. December 21st, 1840, ON THE ae ee OF DECAYED FRUIT- _Havine made a st series of experiments for about ona at Dar =“ very lately I have heard that an old th tree is mi ti in the kitchen-garden o 1 miral Harvey, at Chi Essex. I have never ye' ved this variety from m finding € our well-au thenticated English t di y English, and I hope more worth a our boasting of than the new French pear w with the lon, name of Van sons Lé fom: le = Clee re of pears of first-rate ae, ie ean as specimens of Beurr ré Rance, from ae: pore osdck for having d full th efore their usual period, but Pp that of the late Mr. Forsyth, that is, clearing out the decayed and hollow parts, and exposing them to the sun, _ @ An upper branch recently re- B moved as & New wood, full of fruit in the summer of 1838. There was way of experim' the second branch from the root, between the letters ¢ and 6b. It should be uae. that the two are the one Gnren-cace Taen EN THE LAST STAGE OF VEGETATION ———_—_—_—_—_—__— | instead of tapla vers the sais, "wiksat ote curing it, I s send y ua wi gate hs en ing, with references to the various —_ mae the tree, or ae bat cata You . —* ps M, D.D. | IME CORRESPONDENCE. oe cimens of Hacon's Imcompar- pfully ripe, from standards. es of this variety it is perhaps wore worthy Sei ee a the Flemish and French caste ye saver tatet fully rij very juicy, and I think of rather higher : deter than from alls. Fase Iam on the subject of pears, you will ae e to notice the wide departure of man: eason from their us is By different ahteaaninte giving is head, a mass of valuable ea cellar, in which rré Ratee: i a # a are all pela standards :—Altherp Crasanne the end of November. Hesrrs red" arene berg; Pap at > fully ripe the beginning of Decem! Brel | cates Sennen te oat ; fully +f the taiddle of November. Glout morce ; usual December, fully sed the middle of } of Novena usual season the end = —— and of Septe Winter id of No- seas Fansary to February, fully, aa the beginning of Decembe eae Audley End, the seat of Lord Braybrooke, ae: did al but Mr. Young, the Stedonen, it forms me on owing | to the lightness of the soil all the va- Those I have enumerated were taken from trees Lp sand, but I il. as the ae of i mens ie t me recom- mend to my brethren of , “ancient art’? to sen d any remarkable specimens of to you ; they will now be ene ularly interesting to and nomenclature. apt to deteriorate dh dry eee the first is the feae; the t rtugal much more wasiet and that used now by the Fi in sap.” The first sort is for stocks, as‘it ethan freely from cuttings; the ls comparativel: ake bei: ted by budding on alaatak M Tene Sok io ak as stocks would enhaiatg be excellent for pears; for ‘‘ double work ” is oO well known to ha on fruit-trees.—T’. Rivers, jun. +. Inco: is, in i t z- his sition in the last pres sacle ransoctons, viz., “3 tap, or princi had ae pruned two or three years Nibe roots round, so that when the p Jants reached ee | of notice than man In the cold and frost 7 128. 7s DF ff 1n2g a 7220 Tel nip fiat hl, that JAN. 9.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 21 hitherto waited patiently for six or eight years for a crop of fruit on the pear- -trees I had planted, I think T an be doing your this — of sare: by which: _ early and sure bearers may be ob Th by proning oa roots eve! “iy te two years, as suggested b y Mr. Rivers : u become i independent of boris 3a peat. Ae of of m e, will oe i ae good ath der: ficient “nourishment to your tree : ofa For a foot or more “cullivatio ion has done | natore, ax rat for it: but Mabe this is the unbroken pure sand. j ae 4 ee 4 i tha cali tiaae Sew: In planting r took = Baar precautions, dug holes | The sorts he Sesaneaned Sete the Cauliflower oe ira or White led them with excellent soil; | Cape; which if sown in the middle of April, will come in abou but so cs rp beyond this car soak November; the Early White sown the last week in April — oe ft the trees n anything be done at reasonable d January ; Invisible late White the cost to feanialy this?—E., Weybridge. This que estion is connec cted with a ve Wh fru to be made of vegetable nature in four E m as the r common error. it trees, it is supposed intéatold clay, Ben, as has been t which en th all the mode ight years ago, the result being either "the production of a a fod t se small- aed age enable you to plant ere the bloo more readily sheltered are containing four or on g, and from birds in sum- —H. K., Cheshun the various dened: which I ré d’Amalis. —Having asia oe bed of strawberries tha currants with some of ‘the pate net. a protection from the birds, whilst under it I fancied I perceived the cance Mister than on aie outside, re regards the h ring t the bloo omin, gz pier would aA be pr perpen vidieitiar caged and rH d to cover both bell “ets, prt rry beds, and a iimbte planted with dwarf pea . with some of the patent net during the ensuing s a I mention this to you, in hopes that some of your gs. We may be induced to se i mn same experiment, and, as I shall do, se ou —H. K., € ere x lta Luculia grat —I shall occasionally sala net for tieGanoexras'Cunosterr, the appearance ef which I hail wi h great satisfa ction, a fe v practical ann been successful in cultivating, a nd I know é none that c which the plant assumes too frequently seen it, and yer grown as Luculia i isa incho nacedus plant, found on the mountains of Nepaul, f a small much- ‘ranehing tree. Tt was introduced i in 1823, but i is not yet fou ind i collec have that it ith too rich ; but this is a capital erredy The a gardener should be to keep the roots of his fru es as near the athe of he ground as 2 ret in order that they may profit by e warmth of the a free communication with he atmosphere. e fruit trees to sen #, al, a =. — well S$ soon as sham it cae. te ee down cat raked a not patted a rolled, beg of which, in d therefore unadvisable. bp a shoul | have kept his soil shallow, WO, or two- xine half feet deep, and to have extended the circumference of his , P All h hole, made with a large di ree inches in diameter and repared soil. ll that he now six or seven inches deep, is nearly filled with the wood-ashes and roots of his trees have extended, d more yd He state ce si he that gps a White Bro- * * ‘ coli could rarel brought to maturity in t en at - soil, a foot deep, in into ~ ch they can penetrate; but they den Hill, where, for the last three years, he has adopted this plan will soon reach the ew boundar d again canker. | with success. After the Brocoli has been two cr three weeks To remedy ee Ae effectually, the trees should be lifted ; | planted, the ground should be well hoed, and the operation re- the coarse that shoot downwards should be wut atedly performed during the s er, To protect the plants d oe the t s a ‘ficial from the injuri effects of frost, they are taken al he away ; an “a rees are re-p: ante tact arti cia ond week in October; this checks their growth, which is more ns of preventing thee ‘oots or less influenced by the s of the weather, and by covering should be employ: uch for instance as putting slates et a ae in an quarter, with the heads of the plants to the th ttom of the ve tll gh gros that situation to a sout rder, where, i n ‘ nar the winter, they will be excited to grow ; whe imal ‘urrant Trees.—All my trees are dis- pond sets aoe the roots become dormant, while the sap in the leaves posed to throw out —— to such a degree as to prevent | would be set in motel sun’s rays reflected from the wall, them from bearing e' er emcees or fine fruit. I have | thus softening the tissue, and bape] it a greater conductor of é fox fro a isPant st. A north border was quite as objectionable, as it contains sent for plants t nurserymen and distant | more moisture, and, consequently, the mee Aine be more in- places, tar they all degenerate as fruit-bearers. The soil is arked that it was nd v td mp, with i tu jurious. In his ‘observations on the club, h a b rich a dam d the garden surroun neral idea that the larvze of the anthouigte iynheion. or rac . ~ age Fly, live in the soil, and eat thei: ito th ni BRINE bad Ww at course should thea *.| stems of the pl which they destroy. Where the ge ca rain the gooseberry and currant trees a at grows naturally sea-shore, on the chalky cliffs of Dover, single rary tia check the suckers on thei rae firs = Sear and in vi — ‘ = England, — alka- ; ime substances al id, the disease is seldom or never known; ed thot t i fho Ht fo) this ha te 7 oh lready —— ally this fact led to infer that the i a plan its m trie hs a4 =~ must be owing e wetness of the s tural form absorb such particles in a soluble state as it requires, soil, remedy will accordingly consist in lowering, | and nothin , but when planted i il impregnated with if omaele “hs stream of water, or otherwise draining sf on Fr ire ts, the consequences are soon seen, as the ab- the und. ] exercise no discrimination, but imbibe alik that gro whieh 4 is beneficial, bere Ss that — == is injarious. — ~ rrr tion of the Brocoli root, like and fores! OREIGN CORRESPONDENC ees, Mr. Cues wond freind “ceomabat ak the impure fiurd Hobarton, smannia, 18th May, 1840. ae fem trees | rejected by the . In his examination of the grow in almost ype. ady humid ravine in the colony, | roo! “ a found of Bare plants at t 4 rs bg & ie are gener concealed in eac where “eer trees pro’ “3 tect them from ngs sun’s rays and he Pomme th Ro eeith Vises enhught to- tod? rom t ts of the win outh, west, and | tain the gra on. In many clubbed Brocoli he | northern parts of the island, cupetatied senaiee gre var — not find an ins: a few othe = was observed bs the trees so" la thick to: ach cell, similar to ye wie inthe stem. How they came there he Lead Te"? and ee Ks ther, pat not explain; if by boring, he should expect + ue £. £, the and in those situations fern “abou pe ‘attain a entered the ground to become a pu t chrysalis. Unlike the be | cry nog _ Soe ed _ flowers bai a foliage | & height of 25 foxt or more ‘vith fronds 28 oe 18 feet long. | wire-worm, with its thin smooth body so peculiarly adapted for t you was planted ou ut about t two years ago in the i i v bh hey appear to like en temperature; but yet they | its appointed functions, this grub has a soft and very rou: borde er ae a conservatory, h air is Y app d = y Y | skin ; taking all these circumstances into consideration, with the aay admitted, and which is kept a at a very low 3 nD nde ce cee. a the Berns “ ree a. fact that the pl e only attacked in — oils, it — ; indeed little artificial heat is employed beyond whet a — SS Re STE ae i et oy a th ener the: f = = decks frost = ove the ata seas Mp oe morn pire cpa enact pre cine gees : as low as dimensions of my plant ce the ea rei ae ecayed vegetable ma Ham 3 ss metimes the Whole angi. “en mologist: opr t ay h 4 ecay tter ari - | deposits her eggs 0 lea f the onions; that the newly- ro ae i at reek ty nce) tial tothem. [| haves m gro witha of the rotten aves a — ae a rhe are me bor 3 i into the nm descel in e an n causes pe a ves 12 in. e border # which it gone wood pet nar te eight fe fet from the grovnd— Mego it to rot. This may be the , but how is it to be accoun 2ft. Gin. aes. in the te errgzaciien oe Few fall 24 st done th ese id — for that it only happens in certain soils jommetinie it may valateek ae ed raina ge co mposed of bri spree hivse n : oi ree . : * uae appears get gery in ect be er meee saavion ae — ot rubble, 9 in. thick ; imm mediately 0 ver this eeie pur turfs acer aaa eATR iate Ys re rn seiee hd ptoeee s t ase our eigeticae of this s pla. which is often overnursed. F PROCEEDIN see OF SOCIETIES. vrata riage rteeng Sco am fe < his ross se io well “a It i of the fi the’ coumiey: e “Wontar isnot “associ ATION BOR) tecomponad MEE tae Wek teen ater ne ee specimens he sent were in the most perfect health.] wk sm AVSTRU CTO fom Puceday Eeening Bey. Heory nary years did not ovserve a clubbed plant. so uit Trees.—My ground is poor sand, formerly part} Mia, cond lectate was Select ine worn oF Goa and external | Welham Green Sehvol: Reome. 9) a TH E GARDENERS CHRONICLE. ™ py: BOTANICAL SOCIETY OF. EDIN De. ec. 10. —The following communications be Gira gamle plants By Mr. Mabe Gardiner, jan, Dand Stat ertiel Juncus ifowtes, the Mont y Mr. William Gardiner, sen., Dundee. ~These papers werehighly peeve piri for the pleasing mannerin which the information containe them was conveyed. 3. Mr. Brand exhibited a specimen of Pyrola unifora, dis vered by hind ev. T Mg ipbe binge + anew Toss (thirty totes wh called Jalap are not a little remarkable. ots the By one writer the rag states of the American U: ae ra bat pvr that Barak happens oe have no greater purga- tive qualiti han peered | “sw ‘the saahextie vad Dr. "Seblede and others, that a plant Peo d ato. ‘Then it was Ipomea, or Exogonium, Purga, was the real origin of the ug, oad co: Later saw the people of bag of Scavenals : auch also taeclene: t other plants of the volvalac a Convo —_ snebhenanh: with hai air’ of them from the 5 ere it i the Knock of Alves), in the | stems an lyx, W: to be on It now app parish of Morne, Ban that th xica: ans scall yr ast one eee ips *Purga,”’ adding 4. Dr a four present; m Mr. Thomas Edmondston, jun., | toit the term macho or inte; for Mr. Hartweg has sent home a speci the subject of the p notice, which is es, irae of Cynosures ‘china from the Shetland erry the | th: M Edm whereit grew n middle of the Island of about extraordinary beanty, which I ‘think Wate: that of any of the a mile from the sea shore, and that he could not ius thee it rg yet in gardens. The only plants of it in the country are had been introduce Ma: in Shetland ballast ot de- n aicataih state in the garden of the Horticultural posited in heaps, but is usually discharged into the s Society. They have large oblong fleshy tubers, and produce 5. Notice of the Cypresses the gardens oF Generalife flowers of the richest and most brilliant crimson, OF rather pur- the Alhambra, wen. remarks on garden ing of the Spanish ood whieh it is _ sible to conceive. Unfortuna’ ante it has not Arabs. Ja! Macaula an article “ On the yet been possible to propagate theta otanical R . orn. Juneaceze. down, his mind remained active and unconfined, ran, nging. over every field of inquiry connected with his pursuits, Wit his piaescore ues unrivalled pros, Be raised a creation of his ow f facts— caused no sigh, and jug. He exhibited the iife. M2 a scientific artist and philosopher in its most exalted for Th had no charms for him: or fame, with him were Scuplt's sounds ; and vet mai ny have called obscurity, makes him in af aie ruly d Mr. Bauer’s Bauer, his illustrations of the ° eae deserves eee ial mention because they show that his mind was fully ete with the laws of vegetable id pate sae Ry efo ore they were recognised to to LECTASIA CYANEA. (Greenhouse shrub) Nar. stated that “in 1766 there existed in the garden of the palace of | —This, one of the most beautiful plants of the A Australasian the — rid. He _ the first to elacidy ate Sranada, two cypresses that were celebra’ m in tim flora, has recently figured in tani. azi although of the Moorish kings.” He thought that it might be interesting | t. 3834. We however regret to say that the species still remai a) a his ta abours was made psn till ie pr 28 to the Society to know that these trees are still in existence, and | to be introduced. ‘sur object in calling attention to the figure is, | 4+}, had recip the “cree E the discover The their immense size venerable appearance at once denote a | that persons im communication with Western Australia may bl i Mr ig: great antiquity. They are called the ‘‘cypresses of the sultana,”’ | trans’ hat figure to their correspondents, with a request that | PU lis ned records e are few. It is from an ancient tale relating to the queen of Boabdil, the last | its ripe seeds may be sent home. It is a very common shrub among the por orfalio ee the British Museum, that thos ‘oorish prince of Granada. The incident is connected with the | sandy soil, at Swan River, King George’s Sound, and probably | must gs who wish become acquainte aa with he history of the Abencerrages, and with other romantic events of | on all parts of the south-west coast. It is doubtfal whether our lab the last days of mosiem empire in Europe ; and the reference — yet possess any species so perfectly tifal as this | *400Urs. to it in many an old Spanish bellnd and traditionary tale, gives a | is; i wers retain their brilliant colours when dried, Garden of Ibrahim Pacha. Pacha’s garien dash of historic interest to the tr hich, in such a classic | itis probable that it will prove, — we obtain it, a new kind | near Cairo, has agar an escaped th e fate of his son scene, will be more regarde rae traveller than the mere phy- | of “ Everlasting.” forms a 1 heath-like bush, about a Ibrahim’s extensive plantations at 7 ag island of Rhoda. siological fact of their great sage nity. vb on meeting of | foot high, Me? its branches are oeened with flowers resembling pra 4a ultana with Hamet a eat c the garden | six-poi bases 9 of the most intense and brilliant blue.—Bor Soins so interesting ‘the labours of Mr. Trail to be a fiction or not, the jactesos to ft supsees in Chronicles so | cal Regis ativelize one ag ) where the late pogeseiten has near the tim not to affect the fact of the of the trees To AS tile SE RE TRIES thus alluded to in records so ancient. At the least the trees are MISCELLANEOUS destroy Gree Al the Bag 99 Aras, apple Erges,.9nd.A a Tong five centuries old ; and as the hill was clothed with wood at the time that the ground was laid out, it is probable that their age is late Francis Bauer, Es dge the pict Wand, bat eed in through the _ porous sybooi far greater than this. Besides the cypresses, there are other tree: um the following ile da concerning this dis- 2 SP as = pel ane Bis « was hose tinguished artist, who at the advanced age of 62 years has okaie. eas lermined eve r. init on something in these ; 8 of by oo im. | departed thi Id in the same tr: and unobserved Bay ing up machinery to th big water out as fast as it pressive, to the botanist at least, than m and | manner as he passed through it :— uer was born at —pumps, shadoofs, a BEEe es or sorting ble.” Already they have outlived many ge they ey n Austria, on the 4th of October 1758, and chit would ha the mischief under; but he Salle Se Saneiris haan tonsil Dae tise peo ple tat died at Kew on the 11th of December 1840. He came to | nobody to bestir themselves.‘ Please the "Prophet, the the very trees which were planted and tended by the fair Zaydas Englan in ear , with the intention t ed to ile will rise no hteker 5 PSs ke your ig in God,”’ = re sof the cnciy dope a bra $oct and, yo ris, but Sir Joseph Banks soon appreciated Mr. Bauer’s | was all the ei ae he co obtain m the jet ty. Under these very arbours there once assem arbane: i in i Moccs ahd Arabs; Whee ther makes sad bedaaeae ted | rare ae int oot ] aes em . ion per in England. stewards wet a a ° an of their mate - ah away, the same places rang wit! y revelry of the splendid hy | hie settled on him 3000. areage ‘apres gar » Noth urts of Charles the Fifth and other Spanish sovereigns; and as botani- | now remained to the skilful ane persevering cultivator of rwards oes a os vs lace had hes etaparted ty 22 gees pay cal wei to the Royal Gardens, which were = thes en rapidly this i A beautiful island b ee Soe stray eels, and a orisons of monks arose from at trees where now the peasants of Granada are wont to as- ek aa 5 amir The m rheum Tae It Vora ahim ret re. 2 ¢ fro bf Sy ia, those semble in the evenings for their music and festivity. The villa of Sir who Enos him say, “ Inshallah, ha avy score Generalife, which signifies L mn Arabic ‘‘ the house of pleasure,” | genius parakeet of the p f and pay_ off with bon bastinado !” e Ali a'so. is was the 2 eet Granada. ene nu eae beautiful Thner ions of ei rare een introe ing hi ughts to ager , and it is feckieg of the kings of. on. the side of a steep hi A aky = to on on which I isballt the celebrated palace 0} at Kew by bra. Immediate a it rises the ridge of the of Gare the Third were the result—works now saosin manag Sierra New pa sac etwcio . i ine ——- Sorare yet porretea with Sir Joseph Banks’s library at the British Museum, | Delta, ind salubrious breezes through the country below. The |. Bares pee, Mee ew lade 5 Mya aie? be coma ha i a cat ed s in of be ze, garden, wi ch lies round the villa on the slope of the fOr } ana g g rry, the abu 4 ‘O manage these things is irrigate by numerous streams, which, after bein cution pe r physiological and anatomical truth, | favoured men” in Egypt by nature, or he pidding oF the bo S Peohie: a si velete in tbecon courts ana pals and at econ at Re. period. . Bauer was also appointed | Pacha !— Times. wee Sige Saw scey a perennial verd are. Even in the present | 2fawing-master to the Princess Elizabeth: but he w ryan of Orchidaceous Plants are often much mo- day, although the rich ornam the villa are defeced nd | better philosopher than courtier, and his services, which | leste is ha’ Poet mall snail, Which hides by day bast the = beep ante ~s od ig antains a saa ogee ae ee ere given gratuitously, were soon dispensed with. At / root ancholy pervades e garden Sa ai + ‘ ; be cfg on the tenretiee that inthe tine of the Wes: that time he was occupied =~ the Heath tribe, then in | plan ats, here caliphs it must pegih scene of surpassing beauty. — chiefly from the Cape, by Masson. | are two tinge the ay ait (probly orig, » ‘eek trong ziving a short account from this and other gardens, of the peca- | Eng made from these dr: en and Queen | smell of garlic whea ushed, a metimes pe nase a the eee oles ish snrdenin:8 Sie: — of the | Charlotte. mrt the Pra used to colo our them under his | a third if an inch or more across. The ea er is much see sy ower-beds; the fountains and artificial rivaiets, | SUperintendence. 4 Th d were after- ller, varying from the size of a small pin’s-head to Seattering verdure on all sides; the pillared corridors, and - | wards sold by public auction, with other of Her Ma esty s| that of a laburnum seed, quite flat and round. his Sant towers and terraces; the floors of their houses covered with ts | Tower ds the end of the last century, Mr. Bauer | breeds very fast, and i inconceivable numbers may be found paertiae pel ee ae Bonus roots as and aap 9 2 sg nmeneed his illustrations of Orchidaceous plants, since | on a single plant, though not one can be seen by day. e, and e' hellish of scenery, prove that the Arabs | Published by Dr. Lindley. He subsequently turned his | The best way of getting rid of th ng — ies in a ; al rank in every | atten tion to | the diseases in anise ,in an ch, from his ne tender pith of a cabbage stalk, and lay Pes about sai om — e yc selon io vakizted. wi he f great | plants, examining them soon after dar , and again -early poe: ening esa cng ma ie the orchards an Kite ee ae = and we may oa _ ‘et in the morning. The al eS cated a er the cab of the monasteries. Whil gardening, considered | the onl meng» whic . he received cfoem 4 his life, be- | to the tougher ie rchi da ace w pre sac useful -— the easiest peree ager Ses mad yond t ve-mentioned income, was pol guineas, | killed as many as 30 a ches 7 TS alway o - iatek Hesnssnasta Soir labtaveee sri ae te Among the | 5 which the ‘aloes of one of the cheap publications of the | long. Their favourite food is the flower buds of St ms of their history that any reference to ornamental gardeniag was | F opeas, and whenever gl r erish when the flowers be met with. [ti d elegance are far |in wheat. In 1816, the late Sir Everard Home, a > half grown, snails may t be s pec ted. They will, hide byt co the Ii f the ial assoc of H Etate of the art of gardening ilstrates well visa nt aay ture of the foot of the comm nm house-fi fly, com: cated ers of the times ander con the difficulties he experien meal Sir Joseph Banks, pe sides erseeerea ee . nd Aspidium rigidum. | i iately introduced him to we one This led 't tT u . eouine was info strated by the Herbaria of Dr. Grev a —_ oo pctnoveehgee cay, andy ost useful kind. Me. saaihine from several English localities, with various C. tal aren s of the same plant. . Notice regarding the oe yo en Ruta- aeieris od toes on umber of pry “anatomical in- quiries, rs result a which were published in mon ‘Transactions of the Royal Society. At the s' go: Curi , Pee eae, violent sorte gale = the 2st Duceiabec. produced very curious effects on the Not merely d did che wt drift, but, snow in some p being somewhat soft pe drifted to the: be des) snow, ai nee the strardiary ephuders ssivactia of a mel in Stace and six to; inches in diameter, looking exactly like the holios drical pats of butter Belek to the breakfast table. cent work on the Sane wake eee anited poe plants under the name of A. Rutamuraria, Mr. Bell indicated the that the two und in the neighbourhood of Dumfries. | By Mr. James Cruickshank, Associate. Com: Rich u mentioned that this tifully in the vale eded to elect | ure nog { jor Gra oo “NOTICES OF NEW PLANTS WHICH EITHER USEFUL OR ORNAMENTAL ie BATATOIDES. (Greenhouse herbacesus ie trors that have been committed about the source of the d were to be removed there | pecthae Geae lish ‘a Botanical Mu seum at Kew, ee ARTE ed to Mr. “> 3 The house now belonging to oaies of Hanover Was. perchased for this his purpose the ahdlves th ks in the King’s li- oo some had, in fact, unfortuna ortunately, a dispute arose re- the §land, to. ratkok the Woods and Forests laid claim ; goo some ery waggons oni off with the b eases gave Mr. Bauer the first intimation that plan had been abandone: For ~ pepper: additional observati! t:—Few men, recaps to voted ‘hei ert. so enti: 1p | obse of natural ects, and science coro? s set veries; and still fewer have been so indifferent to all ordinary Lacan for Bauer egal hi nts merely a! stepping-stone to | that tranquillity and happiness pre oe be the ul- | a er re of co science a aes ents. For formation of each m cm be traced, by a long “oot base occupied by the farther p ogress. “So. perdi: and so tach er r their numbers and: pest pe mark in the snow, have tee imagined that the ‘orm were the sole authors for their origin, =e ge with the above-menti all untrodden, it might — who danced in the stor. Suga in New South Wales.—A tahhehed a New y- We kno: parties w poi lenge eae : gre from their being much &=” JAN. 9.] THE GARDENERS’ ee eee 23 ploy yed in sugar-refining in , Lond on, and being able to 5 the ~ t of wr ep over the boilers better than ost other workm selected fo or this purpose; but 7 aes tered into their okey to grow the — ae 3; and frivin’ a letter we have received froma the flowered frécly, and Vibehed | a maoleited of jong and containing a great deal of seed. Blackbirds ‘eh very fond of these berries. At the present time there are hundreds of yen — nts come up round the parent plant, n Bt on nly on the bor: even on the hard amg walk. The only protection given pe Biel to exotics planted oat, is to put over the tenderest some old tan or leaf-mould. Wheeler and Victoria Nursery, Bath.—The beaut Salter, ful in a dated 23d July last, there ‘is n tion mad of Poinsettia polenertink is cultivated here with great success. tt uch scheme. Indeed the land they have purchased receives the same treatment as the generality of stove-plants; Pt thei é my and as it flowers in the winter season, forms one of the fairest P' + + } ornaments ofa stove. Some plants here are from 3 feet to 7 feet sufficient for thei Sugar | in height, crowned with magnificent tufts of crimson leaves from pleatatize, d the latitade of Syd itself ay not do 0 inch 16 in dia me fer og is ta hena ? J Almeria Grape.—As this is now sold in Covent arden Market, we cope 8 publish a memorandum con- ing it, for which w indebted to a learned Pomo- logical friend. The ‘Haas pe is not mentioned by name in ‘‘ Clemente’s Essay on the Vines of Spain.’’ I, however, believe it to o. 45, Beba, which is the ‘White Raisin Gr Lan ngley,” and the White Raisyn of “ ce’s Teeatis n the Vine y e 0 Victoria —Seeds of this, the queen of hothouse aqua- tic pune? have at ~~ been procured i ina fresh state ag Mr S frien a left i Queen- —_ Soho. _ These seeds # were procure eons the e colo oured dur g Mr. Schom My did not faa it in ro “but he seta down some Hp ich, at their arrival in George-town, were neeeed ue cA se ed. On his return from the eond t trip, he d them a pond in a that we may succeed in get ting th to England ; but some fear is entertained that it: is, like Euryale, an anaual. Aptarie®: t+hatD th lehrated writer upon pint affairs of e experiments _coneerning the aphthaske roy en- y be removed fro: e least Prcnerine to told will prevent the expa nsion both of the 1 aay és and phen —Dec. 13. Thomas Brocklehurst, Esq., the Fence, Macclesfield_—Ther yeinafnauls collection of orchidaceous i Petes at this place. ‘Above 1000 plants are cultivated im three houses, nearly 100 feet in length, and bw een is in the highest ponith, hear aye joes sell ve. ful managem of Mr. A pole eby, who, ee co pond it hens is Ti eaent in fi aye ‘ario: epiphyte from Brazil, arith bri t brown flowers ‘richly spotted h the same colour, very Bt new to this country, d Lage a Janus genus.—J Jan, Park, aie the Or d large berries, *: Bi pentiitn: —This watlety is usually known as the Weeping Birch, and attains a much larger — cone the common form. Its branches are also stra ighter and more erect, and the Jateral become very much elongated, a and elegantiy pena lous at the extremities, Mend op like a fountain shower,” o Wordswo' i 5 rch, the horizon’s edge, oat ad sehen framiog in the east A veil of glory for ben — ng Moon.’ upper ft surface of the a aise re or less marked with 2 7 § 2.—In this era “profuse of nursing —— both ie i upper one, abun id the eranebée with persed with innumerable pale, fragra , bighly inflammable elon ous globules, whence it has athe name of the Salty Birch. A Catalogue of the Plants pl in Bombay and tis vicinity, By John Graham. Bombay: yee. Tus isa mph wa catalogue, in English, of known to the author his friends as inhabiting the bay Presi sR it contains a considerable number species, and some genera supposed to be new. To re- » Ealing chidaceous House | sidents at Bombay it must ie ‘Dendrobium nobile i is in eo be tt the plant has sane a ¥ : a - hi of 40 blossoms on of good size colour. A fine plant of D. absence of one e extel nef 3 — to p sons ee Pierardi is also Stogeniing 4 in gi y a ; forte nine flower. | countries it is an acquisition, from its poin' ut wha’ ing stems, each bearing about ten flowers, and is ing in a|the plants are which may be procured from Bombay ; basket suspended from the roof of the house. A plant of Astrapza | of which we reall w very little in this country. Mes gore ma shen % row sae et queers ig | The author unfortunately died le his k was passing flowering freely nere, hind the Gelicate ‘pink colour of its tit through the press, and it was completed by Nimmo. oe with — green of its foliage, renders this one of b a book affords but little matter far ex! e st ornamental species of the teats 28. Mr. Penn's, Lewisha In the stove there are three fine speci- followings = enoweren interesting fac a nal mens of E rbia fulgens, bloom in great luxurian The Cra ieva Roxburghii, a eas dle-siz towers Son ip alte af fowering magnificently, with about 170 ifoliate 1 3 Ow ers ot nae all o ich are very fine. Although this is an | that is pe to be met with about les old a f plant, it ought not to despised on that 8 ¥ power ‘for ieee: peng of its tribe tha ass it in point | Mussulman tombs, is also a native of the ociety Is- beauty, when flowering as it does here. A plant of Musa | lands, where 7 is i planted th odes of the dead, the coccinea is just throwing up its beautiful scarlet s — ha ry same as in Ind This argues strongly for all ‘‘ nations form a striking contras' tl e deep green m ts foliage. ” lumbago rosea ring during the last two months, of men bei nade of tee blood. yiass xXx. a The calebes Plassey’’ in Beng: Lord Clive defeated i Surajah Dowlah in Vist, Palasi tree, buten ea 4 ‘on- Fas eich grew oy it. This i isa geen sue’ \< ent tree, whose Sage be melt e . hyacinths, narcissus, tulips, | flowers are of , and closely go Note ich are looking exceedingly well.—Jan. te: mas in lar; has nehes Arau ucaria imbrica ta.—A fine crop of this rare plant | “ physi is Celis ='Phere is an old plabe of Yucca gio. | 4s ge acia rabica, c + aan been raised by Mr. Pontey, Nureryian, of pS ret riosa in flow mg which is about fo sarteen feet high, inciading The errs end Be “Ac ae alled the Ba- ‘ the lar, pee -like seedg | the Bower site bat the ne are He. ell &. — ded, rt a see vi a black. in ‘ree iL sins” here pa wete pricked into the ground for only third of thei oom sgrie re titdes Drees ¥.8e on f ‘hen eae ed wi round kei rh g toa «tags fensth. Gin sacieee year in which they are developing iemselven noon quires no water, is of to a brisk bottom heat. He agg ioe the daily progres At i yellow flowers, it is-v happily of the young seedlings, under these circumstances, Rebiewws. | introd: om 2 cnaemne. something quite beautiful; every = in development | A Flora ae ee By W. A. ——- B.A. * rocks ore.relagh. bat isniing there in e within sight of the observer. Very lit sae Voo eats 1841. Loney mad sect, nor nae sree the tea water has yet been given them, an ill in a short ere written — nit in erness.” a Rookh. time be t ooler situation deed id Bot: There is riety or disti peciés in Kandeish, a ed Wheat.—It gives us sincere ‘pleasure observ the branches of Nomen =. Ram Ka seta —a tall erect- rma ook tike 1 tree; an t Col. is ‘Cotten has reed elected a Vice- President's tof Although —— systematical, and filling ground occupied prec in ng soe lana pinoy which abounds Be the “ Institut d’ Afrique” of Paris, and that his work atk by the reaper undred seasons, Mr. Leigh- | moré in gum he ¢ n B pin and bh ffers iter | on whea uch appreciated in France as to h n’s boo ey ha 4 : freshness of novelty—not for its | it in t of ta Tei procured for the author a silver medal, from the Academy c * the manner in which it is treated. pods of these trees aré of great valtte to 5 the shepherd in ‘the of Agricultural, Manufacturing, and Commercial Industry. as food for his flock, when A ger s Scarce. e do not know a2) persan more worthy of such dis- | in the wild flowers of Be ngland so exhausted, that ¢ Argyreia cuneata, a plan ant not unknown in this kg tinctions, or one w as laboured more faithfully and | turn from the simple faces of their ap herland to the pyent bred name of Ipomea atrosanguinea, is spoken earnestly for Siosb reminds than our gallant friend, who is | flaunting strangers in Our gar all such we re- of grea reat Lae bi accou aie 3 hr? Bar ‘gt ne of the few agriculturists that have atte ed systema- | commend this book as will atthy the their perusal. We purple stole f its flow It is phd tically to improve the races of wheat. Attention to this | literally mean their perusal; for ant will find in it | districts, ative the Ghauts, and in : Bom! ty an nd ject was strongly recommended the — r evenii am f and variety r a wy for the table | gardens. This species is entitled ‘to the first plaes essor Henslow in h han befo gricu g pa ten has been among the convolvulaceous order.”’ cen ot Society ; and we are glad of an opportunity of adding our by the author; the contrary, we have rare species, viz. Jj it jh sw and I, putchella, are own testimony to the paramount importance of doing so, | work on genera “ait pecies more full of good, sound, | mentioned as handsome species. with a view to increase the Bn y and quantity of the | original information. We shall from time to time fi In addition to the Banya an trees po ahcaans enor- wheat crop. avacant corner of our columns with ex from hi ¥ on record e aoe the work. For the present we insert his account of the a, of Col. Sykes, wig i ntions at the village GARDEN MEMORANDA. Birch Tree ‘ood specimen of his y Bags a . Fr Poo! dia Colidbtotite, with 68 stems, “3 ilton Nesbitt Fergusot, Biel, Busi. Lothian, lat. 55° nk is subject to the occasional éscending from the Wasi ches, > ieee of affording & : At | parade at gerbe station, conn th cliniate i is so variabl at eee = rt 2. —— se" anda moc somghe she, wail m vertical igre 20,0 rate erm mt at in 182 vest was almost finished by the end of July, andi ; sceina -E LS Maiesiedlorre 1896 was not gathered in by the end of the year, Mr. Street has | STS ina boggy soil). to larger masses of intertwin » | the hs mt of hte mutt bi as vl aad yh f Superstition ue Succeeded in beara a tee 2 sw In the Spring of 1930, caused possibly by the extravasation of sap incident on the | asi a oe a ts oy = heplantedon sn Sper hear #south-wail Afichnea Capensis a oie 1e insect, which, as Withering very aptly the inform of our scientifie ee wered and ripene eds f y. The lowing Spring | * ance similar to rooks’ a “yeharl peioreng in Mr. Graham’s work, €! several seedling plants border, which b is a tough, white, “shaded with “or witha prdin iulecthomere : A flower in August, and continued till late fi Detem F These bet fine ; of moderate durability, but very subject called ee ate is the same as Tetrameles Eurychiton plant ned their se some of which were | the « cs worms: chiefly e loved ‘ed in coo , turnery. pecies of Statice, and Lepurandra is identical wi eaten with avidity by mice; During the early part of last sum. | 224 lighter kinds of work, iailly pattensand heels of women’s ris. i mer, Mr. Stre oh planted out under a south wall, trellised, Lopho- yen — en Sauce is —— al for durability and as n case this work should re dition, we trust spérmum erabescens ; it da a defence n amidity, a used ncients fo: whieh end of July, and mandation ee henge Ape arrears soph en me their previous to the of - The oil dis. ts “editor will give a Fone, inde of Lees Bogs 3 being of amuch 4 nd richer colour than when grown u tilled from the bark imparts that powerful fragtatice peculiar to add much to it: : bes ig has Proruce me pede, though it is unce: ri serra Thi rec — in we ha a ae os is er they w: pen. A small bulb of Pancratium illyti , | form in apnea yore wine. wi tree diffuses hie ti i tion ee d_out on an open border in 1829, fivé inches deep, predaces an agreeable as the ‘‘fragrant bet pri etme 4 agate “ae 0 Ag v0 b of flowers in 1632: the flower-stems were 7 inches | birk- Physiology. By Justus a igh, each 12 . In Angust 45 is were ripened, This “< most beautiful of forest trees—the Lady of the Woods,” pedis Daruge in each pod. In 1833 and 1834, this | iptimately connected as it is with the literary history and cere- e od three flower-stems, each b 13 flowers, and | Monials, civil and religious, of earlier times, is Still more forcibly Ww i ihiat @ 7 pened its seed freely both . In 1835 it sent up fine flower. | £S0ciated in our memories with the briglit, happy, and buoyant how proceed to voter er sn ng stems, each having 15 flowers ; and in July its foliage and | 4895 we a seenes of exquisite but evanescent mingled | going propositions =F ae flower. stems two feet ig, the former being two inches | P2i™S and pleasures, when to minds “life and its gyre l. The constituent elements 6 wide. In 1 produced 11 flower. stalks, h bearing 17 | joys scomed but as one long summer’s day,”—that we bon with Mire flowers : 8 Sear it ripened hai as-ounce of seed.” Ta | Indeed exclaim with the writer in the.“ Nouvead du Hamel, % | carbon with oxygen a 1837 and 1838, 12 stems ete produced, each having 1 flowers, | © Tications one Oilers avast subject of im " ne Seg em bined op merge and a great i be seed was tipened. phe each 2 tation; and 9. Car is obtained the form lowers On i n November sje 4 " aad alter u few Gaye wit Gl of this vide ait ane ‘ é, 0? pret: in soil by Weight; one balb, with 7 th @ ij -; and a third, f in is rather light, with a coot clayey i 1840, some of the seeds, old and new ace wa pe ples Sep for tear covering of snow. flower early in stim of seed. 19837- Dy Ne dt in rather mer, lasts a long time, Some seed was so’ clei felted ate | ted by the author that the air, bonic acid from | whi - Apree ob of @ this position by a bet pate con oe at periods long anterior to the i e of thin In former - periods (he says) of the earth’ 3 omen cé was covered with plants, Bir remains ‘These pe i in thé coal 1 for : te—the gigantic monocotyledons, sedge 28 s, and reeds—be to a class to which nat mae ope by of an immense extension rt dpe nourishment from the ‘o 24 THE GARDENERS CHRON ICLE. [N° 3, pa the plants which we raise from bulbs and tubers, There is, — a fact to which Professor Liebig has | tunias, Verbenas, and other plants of this class required for fi i not adverted, seems to show that plants have a flower-garden, that cuttings may be more speedily obtaine, e r the i a the seed, and require no food from the soil when their | special power of feeding upon solid cobras Continue to prot a : i gPrmaraancape a pare eter organs of nutrition are fran’, This class of I al quantities by Ewes of dry charcoal are placed | Lilies — other choice bulbs should hav ve a covering of a te — is, even at present, ranked amongst those which do | in tw: ‘o garden pots, and the one is le un eat while | fr protection ; attend particularly to clearing the walks heed... exhaust the soil.” the Gilet: ix planted | swith soutien eal fibro iw and borders of dead leaves. There cannot be a too scrupulous ms yy in another wae he farther explains this = (3 eH ipo it a necessary sormanenes of the which ma ur ter was created b poe hich s Inhated ad byt the px ing e, the or adverts to the o origin on ‘vegetation. He says, “ a steoanpting to explain the origin of car! lants, it ae apt been considered ntim: cted with that It is sniversall “admitted that Humus arises from the decay of mitive Humus, therefore, can have must have pre- ceded the Humus consequently the atmosphere must furnish that id t of noe food of plants which — sists of carbonic acid. The sphere obtains the as peppermint, and they d e et such as the n that ther re is “the mi uantity of = i the Fr of a summer, id end grower deserves attentive perusal ; it e P pr tap roots of young forest trees, pit than in the other; therefore the mint plant must in some | them at increased distances where necessary ; be cart folie = manner have fed upon the charcoal. her nome arise from | iB. Ligases Pag rigs nip pt not apne cut the fibrons roots. rae which is sure to be the case if yon raise t on the s: ide Sodeager ur beaie of wate Ac roots; in which case the | they were laid; prepare hooked pegs for lay ering, and protes ydrogen so liberated may be iitmnediately appropriated, | young evergreens and half-hardy plants of every de iption while the freed oxygen combines with the charcoal and | _ Forest anp Corrice W sey ag ae d drain land intended forms carbonic acid, which is then taken up also ; and thus for planting. Planting m ded with in light soils if the in und ao. ina fit Frey to receive the plants. Continue ja, a ae * rat het r dicious pruning upon all kinds of timber ; it rarely happens that t evergreens vaaeiae pruning at mae party a period as deciduo; ous trees, ———___— oud they should be pruned in a rogressive manner, seldom if ever, removing more tha ey a two tiers of branct MMARY OF CONTENTS time. “In pruning coppice woods the main crop uct neon lost sight of, always commence thinning by first removi In our leading article, which press of matter rR nurses. This is the most convenient season for making ine: ihe us to compress, wit be —. Spas Soman haz! c iring fences and dykes of all ki Joseph Paxton, Chatsworth, ssi naretk NTOMOLOGICAL NOTICES. ? i o search for, and destroy the grubs of the cock fest persons.——Those whose property rata ge of be gid In snowy weather when boys cannot go out,to do this th os Wt } sent into the granary to look for the coc S of the Com Moth oe granelia.) This small insect does immense inj terially affects their revenue——A s t paper ms om an corn stored up in granaries. ‘The moths appear in May, experie need Dahlia- : 2 . f, an tly f oxygen‘and don carbonic yy This pe jn soho augmen- tation of the latter substance would prove fatal to anima i y to guard against er hers means are aie Te The latter are ing se ¢ ; in what e of propagating will maggots iis into the atmosphere from aay ch causes, gro! tibly to increase ‘its an, oa Mg to year. that all earlier o cribe its volume rns of that di island.—_— one-half to ten ti ont chet which In the proceedings of the West Lon on Gardeners’ ed : at the ie esent time; so that cm can hence at m the cu cote ae € it has diminished.” vation of Brocoli; and in those of the Botanical Society gretand ir ae e atmosphere + thas segeraed ua _ of Edinburgh, an interesting account of some ancient fhe mind: that’ the pee Cypi jose who are interested in ac- is derived, it is always to be borne sil de does i in re reali ity now, whatever may have e ha ee in res: matising plants “will be surprised to fi hich nd ai among our | ten vty when these Fahy are full the pinks, and 6 some observa mame on a thd Cockseo peal, thee rn, and seek a place convenient for io fe which formation into the whe or state. At 7 bg poe crevices of th Se m r, a granary are full o: ese inse debted he lib y of the Master of Trinity | enaw the wood into fine chips, and make themselves cee a ore di- | Goce Oxford 3 fa) hints to tt ae — in which — remain during the wintey, till they un- nate “ ir final change, and appear as small whitish moths more of old dens “y= ahs palmer with Tiack or brown. It is when in the pu some interesting chestvetions upon fr uit trees. ——. A | Sate tat these oven << gee - y cones and they show e everywhere soug for in e cracks of th Van Diemen’ s Land letter gives some account of aie fiv'all’ biiadl prt et of the wall-or 7008 aud all a ae habits of the beautiful tree fern i i cocoons are discovered. th COr cated ee eaigc should of c sublimat tion ey pabteecremy it is so plentiful. Bats, eager moth, and they should be always e: hood of granaries rather than destroy: State of the Weather near London for the Week ending Janu. ary 7, 1841, as observed at the Garden of the Horticuitural le that prec ronitne will not be shines; axe the en enietthasotl fue: ¢ neighbour. Ll the bs atmosphere, for all other sources of f supply oper without the aid of the grea’ of ethian-chaied reviews is a notice of Mr. Leighton’s magazine o' tertaining Flora of Shropshire, and acontinuation of our : the soil. as has alrea ady ice of Liebig’s Organic Chemistry. We trust that bee ati “ f ee ae I h succeeding number will i SS the ds of ever, neither . ber ie slid for nor : = Bader: our readers the neces ity of adding this work to their that thas food of essor Liebig + Our notiees are only i ‘ renti dwells get Sa point at length. its = ale it ** The en eg 8 that the substance ermo' where near zero, can apply but little to Humus ‘cm soil by the Toots of plants, | any except i aur: gardening. ere is, however, d that th entomological information that the farmer will do we : e =blish surah their r tissues, is so aro to profit ants according to he dite in the soil, seems to Yet this po- mination, is found to CALENDAR OF OPERATIONS for the ensuing Week. Ws are aware that the e operations jacmmented to be performed ed weather, nevertheless nded what mi tak pi aa ene, in the py in “ybich it exists in the soil. a We are, we ; confess, surprised that the author should have thought it worth his while to _faise suc ch phantom for the m only by eck peed th be gress of the at- moter and formi ing carbonic acid gas; _and hence the which is the great source of oxygen. The oe rate this fact as ries! — ** All plants die in soils and water which contain no pera Souprys of Sra Syren actly in the same mani el poi ezeladea” air, Sar a geo. of water has the same effect as a renewal of air, because water contains it in so- lution. If the water is i hive from a iotg free wil d th nto a fruitful meadow If any one inquires whence thus s perpetually consumed i in Foard the food 2 jase fit for th “The. proper, ¢ constant, and inexhaustible sources of the tropics an imates, where a pe | water used Wi profitably emplo: yed in thoroughly houses and other baildings, in cleaning seeds. ith the —_. ready for I.—KITCHEN an D Pivery.—If the bo tan- ap rope well-prepared-bark should td added. to ‘the Night e pot a heat of the beds an pow state of the her e sy- tinge; should the weather prove very severe, protect the houses, not in orn: by peating: gentle fires, and carefully guard the roots ani tside from frost. mee Pa if there is no tank for water in the — the for syringing must be heated by other means to 65 or 70 degrees. AsPARAGUS.—Add linings to the beds if necessary. aoe ey Lt Stings for the beds now in bearing small pots, an: ae A ee Depar sora sees heat ie am prove coe ; en this canni ‘Take oo, and during protect th CgLery- the approach of should be co- vered with litter, or what is better, take th the plants up, tie their I gape — ae vent them from breaking, and house them in a cellar or shed. lnonavac-aienahd be housed planted in a fram dry tan, and covered from the hebt. a blanch a in iti is ern Lerruce—ande asses should have fall air at all favourable howev: old rv glass occasions, er short the time. Oncuanp.—Continue to prune all kinds of standard fruit-trees, also. and nail wall- ean: cee and cherries ; ~ dress doom rotten dung; dig between the rows of bushes; froin the Palio the 3 he d thers, oe Il.—PLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERY. In- Door pe em E— e preparations for potting such plan’ requi lager pol wrth oe which it will be necessary to prune, had oe ~ cut sey that the dormant buds may be in a state of stag 823 paging peer mga apy pohrice potting is sometimes practised, i a@ great error; aad air whenever penance or damp weather light gentle fires in 2 to overwater at this sea- pe the water patina hae eng aN .—In wet sd e car J ork = the aiteching gave season ; cut- acter d-wooded plants aad epat juce toa xgentio ciety, Chisw: ick. | Bsucmeresy THERMOMETER. W'nd, | Rain. Je .| Min. | Ma . |Mean. iday 1 29.882), 4 ra 39.5 Ww. Satur, 2 | 30.086 29.816); 4. 32 38.5 w. 0.15 Sand. 3 | 29.302 29.084)| 39 21 | 30.0 | N.W. Mond. 4 | 29.185 28. 978) 35 29 32.0 | N.W. Tuesd. 5 | 29.376 29.316 | 33 22 | 87.5 N. Wean. 6 | 29.631 29. 518}| 30 2 | 21.0) Se. | Thurs, 7 | 29- 760 29. 698) 27 6 16.5 | N.E. Average [29.611 29 .470|| 36.3 | 22.3 | 29.3 0.15 1, Hazy ; fine, with seats n early A.m.; clear and fine ; hurricanes at night, with is | i 2 the flashes accompanied at first i finally sleet, the wind -storm abou! light ning ernne ad large poe Mires high wind, with — hen bail, and * fall of s spr commencing at 1 . ; Clear at night ver cast; snow ; a large lunar hal at night, with a very distinct: aaa clearly defined circumferenc: 6. > ; ther: r below freezing all ony. i Ip tense frost ; ground covered with scarcely an inch depth of snow. State of the A eae at Chiswick during the last 15 Years for the ensuing 7 ee Seeman 16, 1841, 2a oa atest; Prevailing Winds. eeclas Bice sears’ in cess TaLEGE Sg Eeeise y w lea. | SH5/S55|EElwhichit! of |: [4.5/3 ide Jan. |2=F/28 =) Rained. Rain. 2 “la\" | Su. 10} 40.$ | 29.4 |35.1 4 } 0.33 in,j—} 5} 2} 1) 3) 1} 2 M, 11) 40.4 | 38.7 35.5| 6 0.83 3] 3} 2)—] 4} a} 4}4 Tu. 12) 41.2 | 30.6 |35.9; 6 0.36 1 2) 3] 4).2) 2.8 W. 13] 41. $2.8 |37.3) 7 0.20 2 2|—j 4) 2) 3) 1 Th. 14} 41.4] 31.2 |36.3 7 |097 | 4| a} 2}—} 3) 1) 48 FP. 15} 39.3 | 30.2 |34.7 5 ber: a} 2 2| 2|- 1) 2] 3)3 Ss. Sah ua’ 0 ES 0.34. |—|.5! 3i—} 1) .3] 244 Dari riod, the warmest day in this portion of Frac idler pe on _ Oo in 1834, thermometer 56°. The coldest pots oe wrnted of the 14th, in 1338, when the thermometer promt bape coven: GARDEN MARKET FOR THE WEEE ENDING JAN. 9, 1841. wi are some good bundles same price as last week. Serthsion aitenes meee quality, but rather scarce. Batavian Endive is good, at 34 JAN. «A THE GARDENERY’ CHRONICLE. 25 ‘ht to the me et durin: a — brow —_ the week, at from 2s. 6 s. per bun cor its ey Red Beet ‘4 not pete, wr = from 1s. bu. “te 2s. indifferent, sina Ss are psn Fs pny an of flowers mor ee “Gd. each; wreaths 0! s of "different k % lie,” 2s. inds of Grasses, 4a. each.—In some of "the shops 3 ‘the erate ag nt not oo ples are selling at 1s. per doz. ; Alfre: . per doz.; and London Pippins, sm is. 6d. to 2s. wre oe ce ICES OF FRU pples, dessert, per phere Psi = Is. to 2s panies pene per hf.-sve. Aes 100, 6s to 12s Pine Apples, p. lb. 4s to nt mada, perth. at Senet a. each, 2s to 3s 6d {spears eck, w cram ead ephcamne ae Mans ing t magement of Hippeastrum in Mr. Herbert’s work on | pdr rng p. 147, from which the following extracts bear upon his inquiry :—“ H. Psittacinum and the mules between itand regio-vittatum are hardy greenhou lants, requir absolut rest i nter, and flower in the spring. Solandriflorum and tylosum are tender stove-plants, but shoul u winter time. ye is eres nhouse plant, requiring rest in win- ter, and may be brought into the stove to hares’ in Spring. Reticulatum ye sriatifliam are tender stove-plants. Egques' requires rest wint a moderately cool, b ot dam situation ; aden it owen pe ered, it may be plac: n the green- house, where it will grow more freely than in the stove. I have found great advantage with bulbs that were to stand a hot fiue, ii acing under them a shal: tray f tin or zinc, and nearly filled it, wi ri NEWS OF THE WEEK. Ar home, the thunder-storm of Sunday, and the severe weather hick has again eet am, n, have chiefly occupied at ention. empire ; Rin the cold has been 80 rite 4 xt the ther- i fallen as _ ow mometer as Sg zero, a degree of cold sel orm Esigard —We learn from the Provinces that the offender e Bank of Man- chester has been apprehended, and A that | a clue has been send tt obtained which may lead to uy acre ftags of the murder- ers of Mr. Westwood and E rimw otland, the Ch burch question con and The pretty little epiphyte with violet flowers, from ‘Mr: rs. Can- have been destroyed tarry Trelan h, or per lb. 1s 6d to 2s non, is Sophronitis n committed i in Arengh ; Mr oO Co onnell has again "Pane i oF 1s 6d The letter frox n the clubbing of cabbages, is se . sh a } Pifour is pr. doz. 6d t — - eal se under considera! ap ez ET a eS 100, 7 Sy Ger Pareeloaa. qe The a nl in ‘a Je. raid acd he 's aati . the new measures vad the colleen of the Repe VEGETABLES. most anticipated in our first number; and he will see by the asi pinlitans o Be Shallots per Ib. 14 to ls 2d leading article of to-day that we enti tirely agree with him The news from abroad is of great gatas pees Cabbage, White, bir ty to 6s paragus, per 100, pe rage, Bs to oe 6d attaching great importan to eee ” gar Ar ea from Tada ead China.—The Kin of La ho ore is dead ; — Red for eo . Laie aga 5 rue, or Smail, 3e Rag e last meeting of the Brit cen me tio: ra Qh c: } Jad +} } > rs ts, p. doz. be: toGs | Sea-kale, per punnet, 2s consisting of Mr. Hug trickland, Mr. Babi ington, dd Protease 5 4 a © Brussels §; moat roger hy to 3s Ene: fer gare att Lanier, wos eppotatelt fos thi purpose off tating experiments are in the neighbourhood of the Punjaub. The defeat _ urple, 2s to 3s Selery, per bundle (12 to 15) 0 2s “ er ive powers in seeds, e p. 's / Potatoes yidte, per ton, 658 Small Salads, per punnet, in which these powers are of the longest duration, and the circum. | # surrender of Dost oh rsa and the undisputed New, per Ib Br. Od Parsley, per baltsievey Seto ae stances most favourable for their vegetation. We should be glad | succession of Schah Sooja a8 peace to Affghan- Farting “Ardlchokes, per half- emern aatea) per doz. bunches, 3s | Of Samples of old seeds, the age of which can authenticated, | istan; and the arrival of Adm tangy ra es Peiho sieve, 1s. 6d to 2s reen) per doz. bchs, 3s to6s | and for any hints or. Aeiance connected with this curious | . P ¢ Turnips, ‘White, per doz. b., 4s to 5s ggg rpc sade aah ne i inquiry, upon which we shall hereafter take occasion to make | river, and his interview with an en mperor, Carrots, per doz. bunches, Be to 6s ge (green) per doz. bunches, 3¢ to 6s some remarks at len ng y ‘i Paraneps, per doz. ts tole é Mint (dried) per doz. bunches, 1s we ngt! romises, it is es to Aen je $a, ens ‘of secre Red Bate, pe per ‘eppermint (dried) per doz. bunch. 1s H. K., who asks us to explain the rationale of pruning, shall i li ices Soa es = > xe te, Ue ead ths | moe, {asia — veri ~ have his wish gratified as soon as we can make arrangements. | Millions ster oo $ > . to jasil rie © doz. bunch. Is y Horse Hadish, Berean” ed to 58 Rosemary (green) | epbeg es ‘fe Phen Ba at fom be cated M. Boe Sater reg "The Ep of Chi will soon be sist settled. ons : b unch. My , Crionnyatn Basket a Rhubarb St alice: gies betel 49.90 ills —— is probably E. gladiat: Phe T ns Hayptint uate no new features. oe Bicklg, p. ae 5 me Gononien boa Be per AEG 2 Dept ifort. he e plant from ew Holland i rag Ibrahim Pacha is at Damase Ps t _— ir gr, ushrooms, Sola. pete to Morels, per 4 yr at, a aot Propenly &: Eeweme perbape. nok. differen t from progress to facilitate his return by sea from Syri Ebina pare ‘Binches, Trof + aried}, per Tb., 128. lenticu mah It a in that case ow —e hy sad of ve dt te te kish Gasllgs Gee ity 94: Foi = ih pees 3s 6d little beauty. will blossom soon if freely exposed to light, Egypt. He is closely watched by the Turkish army, Notices t and no pt too aH i w api the former positions of th aoe . ‘ pea es H.—The man poate figured in our last number, will be the | which” to rig: d P ‘ . il Pp yeCck | subject of a short communication in the paper of next week. It | Egyptians, and is prepared to prevent any hostile move- is Ey cece varity 0 of the red oak. ment towards the coast. Ree letters announce that - ene impor. We therefore trust that out corres. thasmberinonge a poliepioasins wegen die 0 dow the menlin < Soerarventnhanoes, Wes sont es Scheie Pm ers sh = Ae gin 7 or - general ithe a gone aces? ee a mar alwar he Benenden. 9 pon. independent, and apprehensions are entertained that they ers - A Corresponden in proportions Mr. Errington mutual interests of gardeners and their employers, | mixes the ingredients tof his wash for fruit-trees? The following | May avail Beandbies a ak power to resist the hm a and ey rapid dispersion of knowledge relating to every | is his own answer:—‘ The mixture I have hitherto used is as | of the Sultan. In Fi and inisters ‘ollows—1 oz. soft P, lib. tobacco paper, 4 handfuls sulphur, have confirmed 7 ression thai t the ce art of hortic 7 an llatera anches of know- to1 gallon water. As I stated in my paper (which you tran- vd previ ious ue ms pad ria ¥ ledge, form ob f the G 4 Chaar ; | scribed in your first Number of Gardener’s Chronicle’) I | of Europe will not be dist: ca) i. . and advice, correspondence, or assistance in the attai jt i bare od os ches a ae Bree Ay ine has "ast ece i Spain and Portugal; the eae ment of these ends, will be gladly received. We me be ‘burnt my fingers’ inthis way ; bat [ have. rather jon x ions in Spain. i tal favourable to the Regency, prejudice: good sound me with 3 P com sinhy brush, taking car and the Gove mma grits given the —— of aor Sen 5 bus, on the contrary, we tnvite faic dius Cooalinien liquor, and nde pe ap flood over part oe the Englan % and’ Porta assurances of its pacific views. sion upon a Pynuay It is, indeed, | | h8ve always found quite sufficient.” Ia Portug al a omnes des tg ere prevails, and i is peg with good feelin: ng and good temper. It is, indeed, S. inquires how to get rid of a great nuisance. The br i t th sticwntes betw orre ce that we hope to | have formed a nest in his conservatory, heey aia e orange t not on deat SO: ness to inquire, or f eae the i pet Gees too they of. Let ot knowing of w fail Ld obtaln. uy information all uch persons commun sy wakes, n what eounds they ask them. The su of nag questions in our ees answers will be sure ofa eters. of thai t whic’ h he. ght to know. He is pot age ignorance; for how w little “ “the wisest really rape fears that the know little. if one man | is unacquainted with a ‘fact, ho ow- un and his gardener is afraid to try ato water, lest it should ‘ai the orange tree, although he has foun: dit most effectual walks.—We presume ina tub. In th the — Se will b be pte dew yuse duced a beneficial effe see ie lariat in the s rose on the receipt of that i ieeatienaia and naatione Pat Wome Nets. Tue Courr.—Her Majesty, Prince Albert, a the Princess gare teMa indgor and are all in ealth, Her Majesty, o1 ral days during the ae accompanied the Prince to the lake at Frogmore, and was drive en over the i ice in a sledge by His ‘Roy yal Highness. It nthus, Amarylli: i Nerine, Habra: blanda, Lilium, &c. &c, dacttea may be vo — , stillit is a Halas country, W may | Port Nicholson would or t be iv he ences received from Chusan brin ng our Chinese = mach o nd an army kept togethers roid it "talons government. news down to the Ist of October. eatin Elliot and the food, a and patience + with it. tated, ere z squadron pees ae off the mouth of th Aug’ the llth Captain Elli dhold meeting of mouth of the river in ths steamer, it the ube nie s by Erbady ‘Omkeis, Ba a ‘Die to Gaza This was ree on Wednesday, seni was very fally attended. eats, manned ani med; on arriving at the bart The resolutions propo oposed a nd adopted set forth that the steamer anchored, re — boats proceeded. up the river bs a truce. The forts at the entrance dispatched | occupy sen rusalem and shear his pemne=s Should ‘he ment of the bondholders, as it was pledged to do; that andarin boat to receive the admiral’s letter... After the a it, it is pats that vag: will be over. ne Sur- | the decree = bem —_ Government of the 2nd of render r take re uge under the guns of Tatelli- | November was a breach of faith; that the British Govern- i expiration of six days a a mperor ego ten da — chop ig received, re ies t.} con sider , the Emir iechis ae ps received the submission his camp of Zah le, on Nov. 2 ately comaien his positions, ani se same of the claims. They also complained of the t 1 vy empire, supineness of the contractors for the Peninsula Loans, a mandarin of the first no sind aed Trace The parti- | of the sheiks of Celosyria. The unii tian gar- | with res senpest to the claims of ne beara and they pt of the negotiation have transpired; but it is Syria, under Achmet. Pacha, forming mn that those claims amount o less than one lun stated that the Emperor has Bi to send Khe Shan together a corps of 20,000 ided f ith artil- | gred millions sterling. Canton for the purpose of conducting the negotiations. | lery, had marched from Aleppo to Damascus, in o der to ck Exchange, Jan. 8._Consols for the opening closed mperor is said to agree to a renewal o: ag join Ibrahim. On the 26th the T a 893 to ¥; ditto for money, 892 buyers; Three per intereourse, provided the British evacuate Chusan and | Chief hearing that the latter was preparing to effect s4 ie, Riduddd; hree an a-half Cent. Re- trade with Canton as before; he is also — to on up | retreat across x! Desert, detached several corps to duced, 934 to #: 3 New Th ree and a-half, 98 to 4 ex. div. 7° anisland near Lintso, and to pay for theo bserve hi ments, and to protect the inhabitants, ool 162} to 34; Exchequer Bills 1s. to 13s. that Lin has ex a his instructions, ri that who had made their eabmision to the Sultan. A brigade suffer whatever Pgpaanes nt the English shall think fit, if| of the I t to Jaffa for the purpose, it be proved, after an a that the giles gat and other troops had peed alan at Jerusalem and $2 I tions of his t Gaza. Serious sickness had ab ga Acre. The storm etrope correc’ ti _ Thunder-storm.—Sun: missioner ple “to: sa pe re 07. sary another clock, th of thunder and vhich wrecked were admiral had gone to the authorities to We learn from Macao that a Mr. Stanton, , officiating chap- | sik ag = in ai mountains, where the new Turkish Gocmeoe a - ripen ~ supplies of grain, a and the by ‘aepenlion: appears to be entertained “ the Porte will be pis ag govern Lebanon, pop’ pede med. The d a ctumeue nantes t the mot eers has out in phasis a = raised by radon stated that they distinctly mn the pear Aare an instan qo after this he a of arms amongs mountain virtually Salapendlaits of the = ee and henceforth it is, expected that they will govern ves acco: to of right and wrong Fe, Pacha re- presen he had. taken lain there, ra to | I perp a: nto out to bathe seized by t e Chi d taken. | "The "Baits authorities dette iim of Lin, for the precaution to put be trian a ae Sa ing them in houses th: See ee Been lioeconcenngie to Macao, and fortified the coas! see. oe Smith, the. commanding officer, in order to anticipate their designs brought up his ships, battered the forts, sad landing’ his | ety Bs ; Joussouf Ahmed, with ausack a body of Beyptian troops the assailants were ee bomen o> was descending into th body of the pene 28 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [N° 9 ee rr Lond A por rtion of the clock-tower of Spitalfields | expired at _ Westminster aes from the effects o Chartist Convicts. Sod statement has appeared during church received so much injury from a struck m4 | the Sunday before by her ‘clothes the week, that F Re the Wehining that it is stated it will have to be pul accidentally catching fire. Within the last nine days four- | that he had Salt 5 appoin Sir Johan Franklin ts a down and rebu ilt. A portion of the roof of ‘in — ha teen children burnt by their clothes c tching fire have | clerkship in the eats Depariment t at the colon: ny. been greatly injured; and numbers of persons | n brough this hospital, seven of which have ter- ben meg centres mone Is have g giv a positive: contr Tadic tended visiting church for divine service eibaneads he ie | minated fatall —On Thursday an inquest was hi gs aj- being afraid to enter. The e houseat the corner Brixton,on the body of a widow | who was bu k Il leither to ie of Wood-street, near the chi also received damage. age in the Brixton-road. m Monday evening her | or his associates. The e ° was strongly felt over ev tea was brought u a by the servant, when her mistress was The rosea in wine ids.—A fe ep a 98 the parlo by m pong up tay mer their wnistrese el ea pian i in flames. So ahmed, that edie k trad aa er Majesty ze i i re- iece of work ‘manshi ip fro m the Spitalfields silkw i pat solved to ex tn ecute loom a ry not superior, tot e French w Since then Her Majesty has Inseam: Pm may a a fan ncy dresg ba ll, the dresses of poems are to be of Briti 2 eee te place, and the thermometer, which at half-past 6 on Sun- att: exertions were made to put the fire out, during y morning was 44°, ata quarter past 7 stood at 31° F. | which the old lady was on the floor. At length ppa- Very violent gusts of wind prevailed during the whole | rel it wa I con- night, and minutes after 6 on Sun = sumed to o tinder d tk p d 1 shocki nly lightning was very vivid. t in Hainaul Epping forests have been blown ¢ own, perl bodes ry “A su rgeon, wears en “ei the aeighbour- and the lower districts inundated. or, thes at noon there was a considera snow dy night. ied o baer The sleeve of her dress ane fire whilst ke and d oe = it “ee followed by a long-continued and th from the Vapour of Cha | gave indications of 3 was ae some toast to the fire. Verdict ‘* Accidental | pa cae er — a- jesty for appro hich several tes tel were present, was held o on "Saturday s have been laid b ra of by Her Ma ajesty. —On Monday f orenoon considerable re ment Lyecoorse in mege-gtte green ae dn mare set msequence De tori’ of n m BO , who ave to Molt sii four of the heavy fall of hail, damage to | ing ee accident occurred in fie Archbishop’s Pala had determined to ‘ere “the of the weavers em- the glass of the market- gardens i in that neighbourhood. mbeth, amo the workmen employed in the repairs “ yed in the velvet-weaving Molitaiene aire 3s. a yard The Weather. ‘At six o’clock on Wednesday evening | of that edifice. It — t the painters had been holi- | to 2s. 9d. a yard. The cS > es seeing the sania the thermometer stood at 20 ip one? the streets of | day. armen 2 the previous night, and had not had any rest. fhcdinei, returned to the houses wher me A shop has its the — and the roads i tskirts became so | Owing to the satennbity of the cold fom heated a large pan | meetings, when they were informed t on an eataaae slipp to render walking. dificult and mae ee As of chare oal in athero oomsi in whi chth ere at wor rk. Be tween | had been come to, and that the —— would first hay and om definite answer. ry a the night sivanced the frost midnig ht he thermometer ~ fallen 2 degrees ; but sleeping in the room in which the charcoal was pereite he police in the ye or of lock on Thur. and at that time the state of on atmos phere was such peer ‘bee cath. e weurdl preserved the greatest order, and retarne d to their homes, s held fo r establishing school of design in ‘Spitalfclds, in connection Was h hh the > sista, it. was from oe to six o’cloc eriously to affec' of % Dranch sth th ficul day morning that the greatest degree of cold was felt: They stated that abou at thr ree o’cloc k the clouds 7 away from the cold. became 50 intense as to affect their respiration, At six o’clock the thermometer upwards of 22 poms s be- low freezing point, with the wind E.N. E. _ Up to twelve lock th London, from which {the metropolis was ex empt. So ~ ery - the day were the roads everywhere that as proprietors kept some of their vehicles at an the ev evening th with © un- a apparently lifeless. “Medical a agen or a eonidera tive which o the men was recovered, but a their proved u eats he with the other. Vetch pe eae of them ondon and its Suburbs. ater thani in any form at inhabitants of the geen ee were present, = upwards of The rig eg sated pus had not the ater rove whole | firs as stud t was an- Cte CB a8 pre ne and: Disease ¢ én Shoreditch. —In consequence of revalence of diseases in the establishment of the sn force in the | pecan mgs which the number of bui sildinge: “totally d 8 “= The number of fires ~- It appeared shea > veer | that they ad chiety originated in conseque pester workmen | num! reury stood . with ry indication of the frost 3 increasing in _ intensity during the ight—I —In sm ‘on-gardens, not- the in eon the Round- tagio ous port we parts a this. parish, pre the thickly. three orca containing — me ot Is ere mites visited ardians, = cour are intabited by the aioe lb of Irish, cor the Out or he sales place i i Fr tal by sev —— above a _ age ane a starling hs ct pt a mbs that h d been thrown at it t by a spectator, > es siebilihiniats of the pret ws amount to 3, ror ; ‘abe number of ogee 12 git ed, 195; seriously + 953 738 tly damaged, 2,482. _ The number of few ther Mortality of Conviets. Fur —On Tees day an in- — was held at Woolwich, on ‘the bodies of two ssy, surgeon to the dock- up above thts ya one the magpie let its its prisoner go, and it o the ground. It was ee up —_ _ oe sil injured ema 88 which is ab at does carnivorous while other ps — Serpentine, although the ice is mee ~tan ma se- acks that have run across | Thursday im piers to that effec ct. One of t the j jery Sagat of f Mr, ee In New-c oe —— which let for Is. 6d. per e, and in one a serious nalenaes to z eighbouriod. — house nsists of tw of ae inhabited by no fewer ‘shew ‘eleven. e wash the buildings. board have directed that the infected i in these threé cour it, , there have been many skaters During mense flights of skylarks ga bi to the a leng i Pn In the Regents s Park the attendance of skaters daily has not | eaettoa. wash every Saturday night in cold peng | M. Bossy tnawered that the convicts washed every Sa- | be but the water was warm. dents. ma reneest occurred to the Hon. C. A, Martay, master of the Queen’s ten on Wednes esday. south, which is said to indicate — and intense frost. the St. James’s Park the The principal members of the | while ogre in his carriage t indsor Castle. Tn Skating ¢ Pema aes to make this park their resort and turning a corner of the road, near 1 Lantherhead; oe? car- have erected a ee on the banks of the ice. With the as was Vaseideathlly ‘ipact; and Mr. Murray received exception usions from falls on the ice, no me cuts on his hands from the broken window, bat was accidents rred in either of the parks. It will be seen mae otherwise injured. His servant, who was ridi pon to our M ogical return, that on | behind, received a severe cut over the eye, a -. other- — —_ the thermometer fell to 6° Fahr. We! wise Tuesday ‘dining, bet 1 and unders' however, that it was observed, een | o'clock, Mr. . H. Mere ace gentleman maagiege in Pe ii sad Camberwell so low as Hye below W zero, & = ee jes stone- —— was Pmt arnt to degree of cold ee that Fir unday morning a fire broke out in the Vic- pensorie rg 8 and the lighted cigat ‘ell the bed- tli jars ‘Depttord a created icp oy alarm. | clothes, which ignited. Befor ag roneed to his’ On the f the e e fire tinguished danger he arnt tava drenth owing to sap Se ‘om panies. ~Marylebone vestry has appointed a work A great of disease, particularly a ceokion ¢ prevails i in nse pecions eeettate it is said, want of proper food and clothir Lord Cardi ongst igan.—In consequence of another complaint against this Sanbeaels as colonel of the llth Hussars, having been forward Horse- Guards, Lord ‘Bill has reprimanded him ti are stated as f —— rdigan had — orders ‘the t i —Lo rd Ca should attend the: troops = ohana and back 3; on leotite; the doctor — trough bes little gate of the churchyard and fell i the ed through the la Wi 3 ° ip seqteenicet orders, ns oft the. Ita rs that- by some accident a ihe, of rice or nd ‘Mi +i ha troops 3? bie lordshi ir.’? ‘* But I don’t understand cis my i sa nae They ppea — had caught, a The dam Sa atarday | night all.—On companies—one fois ~ river "Wand, net ‘the t of No. 50,M ee from deep springs in Bushy-hall mea near Watford. rns h os id you not come out at t he small tor replied, "*¥ did.” sire en,” {said io oda “ : said you in future, sir, to co ut of thelar; oP Some oneasked Dr. Sandham what ‘ed dis been attended with loss of life. As soon as dia-rubber.—aA is said t I tak t 1, cid § given the fire-esc ape ladder from the misbury station i di ber! laser gate instead of the large one?’ His ee over laced against the house, when ewer man who had the | is - bea F canoer omare on which is to be put ae sent ve the ae and in the presence of two officers ‘intendence Sof the machine went up, and, iti is stated, | faci g of eaontchoue mised with i iron filings are sandal; e him a severe reprimand. Dr. Sandham Tse ma b ht down a child in safety ; h Py | t written west to Lord Hill, —— Lord Cardigat, and was in of descending, n the canvas esc: chaeae Monday Charti Hed fo t fro the two officers gave way, and he was precipitated on the pavernen fete wens ‘ken well- Soon I agreed wi b poor fellow was taken up in a state of insensibility, an hite Conduit “rind to : es Queen and | the saab 's statement. * Lord Ge rdig ‘co town, was taken to the North London Hospital, where he lin- pein both Houses of Festinsstad for the immediate | and had an interview with Lord Fill, shortly sin which gered in the greatest agony until half-past two in the} recal of Frost, Sion as and Jones, the Welsh Cha: a he received the following reprimand :—“ Horse-Guards- merning, when death closed his sufferings. The and the release of the emg scagetien mccosagesta Prior —Lord Hill regrets to find that his reco ommendation to s00 er —On Tuestiaynight = fire was a to | the hour for forming in not = be raging in theinterior of ** Salem Chapel,” recently erected | | tt aiiand I the effi f te se-G aar as, in the Mile-end-road, which was opened for yoblie wor- | banner, whilst the m rmers — arious | by way of oe ere of the earl’s conduct.” The t# ship for the first time on Sunday last. “It appears that | aoe surrounded “3 anamerous body of working men. | officers and Dr. Sandham hiave, it is said, expressed thelf the interior fittings of the building not being completed, | On the arrival of t e procession at White Conduit- house | ntention of leaving the regiment in consequence. men were emp in the chapel bp Pos rj tl The Mu: of Mr. Westwood and Ehza Grime Tuesday, and they had used a fire in their op 3, —At - . — arday, a gama Sowing, and 1,500 persons are supposed to prese Re the ‘grant of 15,0007, —_ oul the night-train. Since of them. Wa dei sessions an information was manson of Lard de ovat Long Ditton nae . As the female servan ere about to retire to bed, on the t the Brecon laid against Ca Williams, a for swearing profane oaths whilst acting in his magis- terial capacity. The tes retired to consult to- gether, there being some oats « on the pent the bench rag to whether the oaths u not; on their return they found the defendant guilty, | nthe and costs it bad been smouldering for some Cornw visited byh heavy falls Ils of : snow, 80 f men being 4 350 of all ranks, and making an average of less brig “4 per cent. ‘This, although a larger proportion of han usual season. It i is to be taken into — rage ers have given cues ° ue pense. consistent curity — given to the senicg sO as ra ih duties eas’ Sli des e Pavement.—On Th held by Mr. m Waklen on the body of James sinken accountant, who, while returning to his residence from ursday an inquest was | fi West pms generally has not years. The mails have been six or eight hours ah The Oriental thence into the On examining the spot where the nd that he had trodden ona “slide.” _ Verdict, z is ental death.” + at of the Poor.—In consequence of the | inclemency season, , the parish of hig Andrew, sates have hb; calling u are adopting similar seit meetings will be ‘einnniony held. E rmy and the Police.—We last ae ning was fhe country. In Essex, etathiak? Brute, | Bt and ofber places it raged wi with great violence. ee ee in Mr. Tafnell’s | thing ampton was she Sted by a violent - Welverham oe and lightnin; mpa The commenced pater 30 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [N° ceived seven weeks ago, On the 19th November hi fi By the pracr of illegal fishing it is dog bit him on the fieshy part of - thumb. The wound said that ache oatlié are not o prived of the choice was rather severe, and bled a little. He became ill on productions of the river, but aaa st atten are in a great Sunday week, havi z sctigiilnst és on ‘the Son ak of a| measure shut out ive the means of an honest livelihood stiffeess in the ha n Sunday night he was attacked | In the teat river Te eme muc sille gal ne ettin ng an with sickness, and was teat deal raves n th I Monday a surgeon was for. The deceased died ney turday morning, a person in Saat hless haste the following morning. Thompson, surgeon, sta out a policeman, and, with ” tures ar with that he found deceased vomiting and complaining of a Ft, besousht his assistan nce against thief, o whole severe pain in the stom He ae be ty in swal- | gang, who in t act lowing liquid in ens The oms gradually on breaking through the roof of his house: and fake 0 per- increased, especially the “diffic oaty'4 in get wing, and pee oa the atrocious attempt, notwith standing he had the aversion to water. He bled him to relieve bi Ze ? ; when a quantity of superincumbent earth fell in, ae Lees and stoker, ord ni pir suffocz by thes 1 in his - “bot 0 nite 1. accident took miles beyond Hay earn Heath, fby which several ‘ina have been sa crificed, a nd 1 7 Pr ri men b uried by a fall of earth, up the road.—The cee eae of England Ray ib the prensa of Coals was opened on the 4th in e day was ushered, in with severe T continued throughout ar day PF ons Siities ated tog: and ek eighteen leeches over the of the. ene oo uda ‘as fear had left them, The police- early hour ¥ the oal depots, at differ. There a vio olent dehing an db iapt wragm, | man taseltistely ‘repaired to the spot, and the noise of | ent places ase inin, ailway, and a grand stand and i nes took t n attempted forcible entry was still going on. The | on the race peak in order’ to witness the arrival ang He fe sensible, pty called for the ateeudgats to pis r seemed to have already made his way through the | passing of the trains of coal-w 3880 s. About half-past 19 hold him down. The = ed and was actually engaged in tearing away the ceiling 1 by without stopping, drawing nearly every minute, and his dread of w: se. gh bed-room. There being a trap-door communica- wage oal on their sont for York : in about enever he saw or felt it, it Gaavelied ‘is wi whale | tiine: toe with the {Space between the ceiling and the roof, twenty @ vee ae rather to begin i in earnest, is presented by the machine | now determined to the same period. It is ibpeatel that ha manaese with his agitation for i domestic parliament. Sie ea be placed at oat mile along the ot 4 way, by vin them the which means a complet stem of signals will be esta- | repeal, he said that} bound 3 pe ars ae 7. per mile, rere the annual of the people of Ireland, and the i sees of the yer expense Of about 5/. ps Heer —The manager of the Peder Counties erat gl tat a system of ve pe for the Railw: On ie back R ba the Irish people, at one shilli ach 5 that of the chim iis ror thet set ne is mE a reflector, so ould gi ve hi im 250, 0007. somali : 5 ty obala then say he of re letter i in which he enclosed the eheck. A a light pressing from the top of ae train the p eople in. vous cler ‘the 19th the prisoner | will 7 reflected po upon the engine-man. repeal. to th 4 calied and fourteen | guards sent with every train are provided, bi sides their to make Trele nd a S peceata a fret and a happy coum or fiftéen letters, addressed to the Bank “of Manchester, | common lights, with two signals co’ misting of blue and | try. When he was born, Ireland was a nation, anda were givento him. A clerk in the bank of Jones, Loyd, | red lights. Upon | the removal of a pie of tin, a screw | nation he hoped to see her again before he sank to his and Co., swo t the prisoner, on morning of the y | grave. oe .) The eting was adjou urned to an 19th ult., presented for payment the check for 477. 9s., cage the signal, and gives out a most intense light for| Irish Manufactures.—A and that, suspecting something wrong, he took it to Mr. time, which, falling on the engine reflector, is sent | started fo pie purpose of supporting the et in Loyd. Mr. Burdekin, partn erin the Bank o of Manchester, | dows concentrated the engine-man, that he | favour of “Trish werperinopg stated that h is immediately aware of the signal. The blue light New Census of Ire: d.—The - Lord _Lieutenant has from the post-office. The letter produced and numbered | indica , and ed bad light danger.—Last | appointed Ww. ck enitor, Esq., “Fes peeeitee on the 22nd ult. ; it was proved to be | week fire urers on Midland Counties Rail- retary’s . J. Brownrigg, Bon, Inspector of in the prisoner's iting, e indorsement, | way were charged with “obstructing 4 Wigston berynp as ae of t the Province of = ert and. T. Larcom, a i dia pe Bern ge written across the check. | station master, William Foster, in the tion of his | Esq-, Captain in the Royal Engi , to rv pring: the of the fragments produced, and | duty, and refusing to quit the lin Of “rales rying into effect the provindene’ of the et. iohted tp in satis of ae oe umbered 2** and “3,” being requested to do so. On the night of the’ 24th De- The Storm—Dublin was visited on Sun day with a ter- were found in the prisoner = lodgings. Under these cir- | cember, the ants came to the station, and re- | rific storm, se os poe bya fall of snow, grin prevailed ft quested Foster to bie 3 the train, that they might be con- night ; to’ ing the wind abated, but the snow y. fora —Last week as a a gentleman a cester; when he informed Sen that he could | continued to fall aere S, y of -of Huddersfield was coming St this t t, for it was not a appointed to stop th Defendants | tinuance.° ‘The mails from London have a ha: fro by the train, he observed a y seated in the immediate tely commenced pine him, Mtn to to. SP I hours later, the wind bein m the carriage wi rs , thes. 4 an infant on her knee. He |} the train, bade rned th t pur t. anne © vs onthe Pb gaged mas ly entered into conversation with her, and after asking wai hey d to th 1 3 a whether she yf icine to part ith the child, offered h line. The pfs Le master €h oo the bitte ape, to from the ‘rea vy fall o ow. a sovereign for ender she reser r Rie as | go off the line immediatly bat eet, crags d to do so, till} Aéroci: «Marie S Armagh.—On Saturday evening he supposed, 7 ook the | the train ithin The logge: last, six sean armed, called a he house of Mr. Pow sovereign. W. topped 2 ky ie r the | train havi yetiocdt yk an a 4 Foster to stop the | surveyor to Mr. Quinn, at Newtownhamiltou, county Ar female got out, leaving eee pila enotid ae protector, | passenger-train, and upon his refusal threatened to magh, The door was opened by the servant-maid, whe € wld return and feck her baby ;/ his brains out. The fellows persisted in alking down j said her master was at home, but that he was engaged. nd on being searched for, it ot towards Lei cester, (and on passi Rotgbion Via- | Four of the party then ru: ‘orward, and. ering the altogether, leaving | d when f them, who peli nee | Mr. Powell was sitting with his two daugh- ion of his prize. It | was s iatolienel ‘stumbled, and fell Gadiet te! Arg bile’ rs, pere ly demanded what he was sales me = t being disposed to take it home | instantly dragged him out of the way, otherwise he must i sehool howe in the plan ting,” which w: to " Huddersield, where he has a wife and two eit ded Sr scene first was fined bs Incladig costa, ad erectio r, Quinn’s estate, under his : a a Manchester bour; the second 2/.,, reeks’ it is his om i hen found, No clue has been ob- Glouces: —On Thursday the conservators of the Severn cabibired before the agietrate th ‘i i: hele maxi a days since caught | ine ra Severn, near this s city. The So Wheconsera ief occa. ei is pes by taki ny: - this fish ane we they did? herd. faba: the “third Mie cf one month’s and the one 15s. aa stp tees eae Intour fet ‘da Birm Ue which three x the ruffians (the fourth paving | ssa Monday, a Tuggag age-tra on t held back by 3 furnace oie upon the waggon next inl foe ‘and co nsuming | the furniture with which ‘it was laden. It oe eparated b fhe of the ——An acciden Fada, fen ag ‘Brighton pexiad The os eee about to pass through the te tuipatecy eek near | Cuckteld, ‘vith a train of empty waggons, ba By iy t Ak train, si two fish i question 5 ibs. oe: {he one having 3b the other This quantity of would, it is calculated, have Eien ered sch of tion, r setts ae witel ae tie, came Fenians afer ay otc pas et Lee Hii, dragging the engine after it. Almost ed another portion of the woodwork, J hold of him ; and notwithstanding that he ¢ being a Bos ful man, struggled desperate ly ates. succeeded in roagies bal doo e they inhuman sha him Ete é ruffian who d inside struggling = the dangle at Jeng freed hi melt from her grasp, b g her on the forehead with oe butt end of his 2 ar yore turing her skull, and prostrating bet sen paar at a iis ieee ! tian horrible tragedy nneneh but a few m the second dav; = pepg ey anges Fan to the adjoi pst tip inkahitanta But Sia teers had decempes. assistance cam The. body of ths we nate father was found at the door; his death, from the burying ne. 2 ene me eT a x : J § ~ JAN. 9] TE te Re ee a a eek ram THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 31 nature of the wound, must have been instantaneous. The dau ughte F WAS, by surgical aid, eens to consciousness, rs +} _ 5 charged with | OTLAND The Presbyter y A pein ie met at Keith on Wed- e — the 30th w meeswert and competent =e eps ead; it ¥ imously resol Presb ytery, finding that no other course remained them than to y this er orer of the greta Cc to incu se uilt, and subject themselves to tes pains and penalties of d sediaueas 2 lve to meet Marnoch on Thursday, the pr day of January next, - the purpose of receivi d admitting the said Mr. a Edwards e minister parish of Mar noch, accordir les of the church.”” The motion ’ ord was unanimou arte The Fy vesdalnte of ontuie met on the same day Mr. Cu oningham sa aid, the members would be aware of that he intended t bring before them a motion to short time afterwards were seen o be who procured Meret aI bhavle ican prs a mercantile clerk | bes tapping” their respective i as pes as stony. a no and d lac: the -kno of n London, filled them na from time to time, 0 ntleme en at the addr ress given, | the anks were satis fied, | doing ; whatev any be - age and his pos plac — * poor blind” ig & a lac ” An Amateur Gardener. I ,* sition, ee must whether physical or man, M. Le namic go € had w hitened his have an occu of some sort, epee An ecole and worthy of whom mot be d that a erable ‘cke } the drawers _taking care to sone funds to London te ven ha ad cast - that ornament as a superfluity which became due, th on for a considerable | time, One or two cr the bills, how- gery an have since fo adm ba The greseeet, it is sd deny that ehey representation of the acceptor to the bar Miscellancous. AT y gave a false i. i End has a parrot in his possession almost as highly accom plished as th ts ha goin his a Albert. This bi Hance, of Ludlo rd can whistle sever n sing ance, ‘* Jum f the Court of Session in the cries *¢ Wi ck, oh! fat duck, oh!” spells several Marnoch case. From his he was | words e ete —- age ple by their names, an not able to send en the intimation till the end of last | imitates almost eve week; andit has since been represented that this notice mometer. carey ingenious machine, called b was too brief, considering ce of question. = sa ag Mr. Osler, of Sonehae. the nt Pg er thesi to y the ques- en some time in preparation at the Polytechnic In- tion; and be had now to. propose that the Presbytery stitatio bs a as yesterday put into operation at t should meet again that day week, when he would move | establishment. Its object is to indicate the direction that the Presbytery should adopt a mem force of the wind, which is accomplished by means of ment ; t, which uld st oa n of the recent decision 0 of the | a vane of peculiar cays on pla e the roof o C Q rd of | the building, and mai ade communicate bd ehpd ofa God, t i i f the land vasion | or tube f the ents belo of the rights and liberties of the Ch i rch i Scotland as ve a4 fone extremity of tu ih is pone pinion, this as n rack, which slides er a and forwards as d hair- ear’s grease had rendered too expensive, not tong reve exercised the profession of haberdasher, in A 2 His sen ere we ept with s rupu exa de these deioat para were ¢ exclusively consigned. From ewy eve his sho; kept a apprentices, whos: rae won cre mee Wc ty CANE from nthe counter to the shop, Simlating with « a ord o a me to ti does her fren the honour to exchange remarks on ; e state of post, jaca a Now ready, beautifully printed and illustrated with tae fe Persons el 9 become Subscribers with the New cloth, lettered. 3s. 6d. each, bound pam pr gilt, CKET EDITION OF LORD BYRON’S reunel dang Rae yeryanilyanan ag Year, are reque oF. be peat as the Proprietors have been obliged, a! print wt less than Twenty-eight Numbers, Childe Harold. 1 vol. mas. 2 vols. The ATHEN ZUM is prin’ rinted i in large Quarto, sixteen pages of Tales. 2 vols, Miscellanies. 3 vols, three ae each, and Double Mcictons are given as often as Don Juan. 2 ate required (25 haye been given in tex ear 1840), John at Albemarle Street. IT CONTAINS . REVIEWS, with copious Extra oy Work, AND ow cucuM both English and Foreign. 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Thomas Hi < Horne’s Introduction to the THE HAND-BOOE Pa vr Ligh a TOILETTE; Critical Study of the eageecegenc Nearly three hundred texts of Having in view the union of Bodily Health with Beauty of —— are more rer le explained in this elegantly-executed Person. Price 2s. cloth. ie, and ina m: regu caer curious and interesting.”’ E Is, 9d. Post 8vo, price 6s., se LETTERS PROM PALESTINE, written ¢ dnring a residence : we lenid Professional there in the years =. By the a J.D. Saget The more liopcrtant in reference to Scripture Hi Visited by the author, amascus, ki Mount Tabor, erusalem, rt — Carmel, R Beer, jount Lebanon, PRA Li | Be eyTo at, Hebron, Tiber sere LTuU RIST, in | Mount Si The Piai She biake of Sharon, and zie — Nazaret The Dead Sea. cor e Green- Baalbec Valley of the Jordan, paaerbieiag ithe in the In < present Bae affairs in the East, this yolame will be ci gs. By Ca as. M'lxrosn read with especial interest C.M.-C.H.S. np Cates ta to the Hinge Beigians at Clar: are, London: Tilt and Bogue, Fleet-street. mont, and ioe on Dalkeith Palace. In one caloared og a 21s. ; or with — ae. choice be had, price 7s. 6d. cloth, ts, coloured, a THE HISTORY ‘OF F FRANCE oe Ronse EARLIEST PE- am work, - - — and ‘aon, devoted to RIOD. By E.Ds Bows: science of Hor 7, the most useful) (The two ——e of the French ch edition coms soprieed 3 in the one of Gardens, crer pulsed eo ae oe the translati: Se. 62. cloth Snphis, Mantel, a8 Opp eat ae rms micron? OF THE UNITED $1 STATES OF AMERICA, By Joun Frosv, of Philadelphia, “There i is a vast deal of astronomical informatio: ost winning and u BURASODT manner in this delignts, rola: which, not less for the novelty of its plan than extent of its intelligence, refiects infinite credit on the tates talents of its — and editor, Mr. Darley.—Sun. Walton — — and Publishers to University wer ow convered ig a a engraved for the work, S ‘ELEMENTS. Brose PLANE GEOME. pendix, _ _Suppleme ys 0 for the U: Y, In cr. 8vo. 4s. ts which has yet ap. peared. thew pe for x brevity, likinonan and discerp. ing attention to ¢ learners Y surpassed,* —Dublia — tyes “stars ‘with the ** Elements,” pri Bye — EY S GEOMETRICAL PROPOSITION ai sapere ora te eet to Eucli appended t le’ by new diagrams. ** Will be found of considerable value as an aid to Teachers of the Mathematics.”—New ae Mag. In f.c vo, price 1s. 6d. Go0ctrr Y’S FIGU RES OF EUCLID ; being the grams illustrating the Mag el hdd the Enuncia. tions, aeeaiae ee, for aay 3 -_ Whittaker and Co. n the ( e Mari a ndon. Soa ers enivae: by allt ict sang f att ye ees gn ne Be Sippy A, ¥y* ‘0 BOTANY; containing Figures of di mys newly-discovered Plants as are not contained in t oe To supply this sonteney Tue SHAKESPEARE Soci as been established : and it is hoped that, when once its pur, is gene. known, it will produce a spirit of inquiry and ination, the result of which be the discovery of much curious and aluable information, in private hands and among papers, f the very existence of which the possessors are not at present aware. Everything, whether derived fro: peer y or printed sources, that will throw light on our early D; tage will come within the design of the Society. The cabi- lectors our public libraries co uch that will s a dramatists Restora- el lished, and th pies of rarity of naueansigte: The best of these be edited under the sanction of the Society, accompanied by ~ em sketches and notes. The Tracts by such prolific authors as Nash, Greene, Harvey, Dekker, Breton, Munday, Rowlands, — Taylor, Jordan, &e., great ic} 2 A pre Pa connexion, either imm: or remote, with our veanty Stage and its Poetry; and to the republication of these the attention of the Society will also be directed.. In time may thusbe of the scatter id popular wri' 5 The Works of " e, Northbrooke, Rankins, Whet- Gosso ibbes, Heywood, an others, w — theatrical fae nuaorear as thei inthsicy, portant in the history of our ene and caer (most of which are of the rarest possible occurrence) it is intended to reprint in ected se been formed, consisting of the following Members :— Amyot, Thomas, Esq., F.R.S., | Harness, Rev. William. Treasurer, S. A. Jerrold, Douglas, Esq. A » William, Esq., F.R.S., Kenney, Jam mes, Esq. FP.S.A. Knight, Charles, Esq. Bru acready, William C., cg ce, John, Esq., F.S.A. Campbell, Thomas, Esq. Collier, J. Payne, Esq., F.S.A per the MSS. the Courtenay, Rt. Hon. Thos. P. British Mu x Craik, George L., Esq. Milman, Rev. Hart. Dilke, C. W., Esq., Treasurer. Talfourd, Mr. Serjeant, M.P. Dyce, Rev. Alexander. omlins, F. Guest, Esq., See. Halliwell, J. O., Esq., F.R.S.,| Wright, Thomas, Esq., F.S.A. -S.A., &e. Young, Charles M., Esq. The Society i imited to 1 mbers, , by one of its la li no copies of its works are to be sold. The first work, the Life of Edward Alleyn, from original sources, and containing new information regarding Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, and their eubchinaasicn: will be ready for delivery im anuary. Communications relative to the Society may any Member of the Council, or to Mr. Rodd, 2, fetes: prone Subscriptions received at the e Metropolitan Bank, 4, fall ecg in a GENTLEMAN’S FAMILY, five les from London, a VERY GOOD PLAIN COOK, years maki 25 oi 35 age. She must be able to e and bake Bread, must wash her own Clothes, and assist in the general Family Washing once a month. Troner is indispensable. various de- partments of Nursery work, id keeping in repair ail of fences, planting, pruning, and thinning woods, mea- si iS and preparing timber for sale. He can measure land, and take charge of all branches of the Forestering business. He 8 i = serve an an en! an in Eng- d, and can give ample certificates for ability, he? riety, ne honesty. Letters addressed to - ar at the Office UTTING THEIR TEET TEEDMAN'S SOOTHING POWDERS. ge fects of these Powders Pee ; ; * iption ce 2 for the nearer nt of the affairs of the Society has be seomenpeeotir ‘ : aa Alo: Jan. 16.]. THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 35 HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. | become gros bois, or timber. It is upon this point only h mired with impurities, but has a very sweet taste oe AT THE GARDEN. hat we have any remarks to make. mucilaginous quality of gum, and the stickiness Noric dayne rit that ps aroneine —— eae _ Te appears, from the observations of De Candolle, bgp sf ola sugar. At a temperature much below that the Boe: ante ee ane Epes the best we that ng = it becomes fluid, and 7 be easi es h ted Re- P possess, 5 y Sete se viz.—May 15, June 12, and July 10. The prin jg BR into cakes it is isa ipsid Tad es gulations a aa» va Hohl upon application at this Office. 21, Regent- ATT socr Annie ARY MEETING, * 5th. ora on 184 1, Part of the TRANSACTION: ates, (completing Vol. II.) price Pe 3. 6d. —Part II. ine besa 6d, ) 8s.—Part Il. ge ur Plates) 4s. No. 17, Old Bond-street The Gardeners’ Chronicle. SATURDAY, JANUARY 16, 1841, MEETINGS IN THE ENSUING WEEK. ticultural ». 2... 2 BM se bsasriage Aaah Re U ee PORORIN a nnn we me & BPM. Wednesday ..-..... logical wee eee eee 8} v. or. In the Court of Chancery, on 4" e. arty the figures of the Red ‘and White Oak, number, 1 which bad Deen Feld. hacia Morges i in France, sithough it 120 7 ng wi gh aah ay eb: ‘4 th, and that in given in A our first was that of a fragment of this athiargt Seas } Oak, which th r of the Botanical er a) at ry ; wercus e inches ; so that, when twent: ee old, its wood, | mannifer A ond segs plant exclusive et, must ios iliac’ nearly 24 feet in cir- | sent by Dr. Dickson to a friend, and I doubt if it is really ference. Now as oaks, ii d from acorns,do not at ber ace oy oe oi ore Its leaves indeed are much most , under ordinary circumstances, a greater | /arger than they usually are in this country, and the eter 3 inches in the first twenty years of their marco so sir aman A eh have been of a deep growth, it is probable that the tree at Annecy was the | j, the Res Ok still it has gorraetae! are y noticed pearance of produce ol of : a stool : for all ra-and fo the that I am sceptical as to its specific difference. t by dling t | Now that I am upon this subject it is as well to add that twenty years o ll Pp k (Q. Mongholica) is also to all appear- with that of sh from aa old stump. orm of the Red Oak, with leaves however The same author found that an Elm Tree, 33 old, ch tapering to ~ base, and dilated towards the upper at p has the pera" ees footstalks and shoots of the Red oak.— J inches ad- on the 16th of last De- cember, the Lord Chancellor delivered a judgment — mportance me ca owners of timber or of tithes ; 3 the 13 ditional wood between its 30th and 60th geal Now this ON GARDENS —_ GARDENING. To the mechanic, the sedentary person, the man who is day t e £ hich pon coppice- -wood of more than ing years ’ growth, upon its lo oppineys or its, bark, The case as reported in the ~ Lozon v. Pryse. —A bill was filed by the Rector of a Cera g compelled d most ore o breathe the con! uch tre ging fron old'st ri the | air of a crowded manufactory or warehouse, it is highly iret Seielty years, it is probable that th fere 1 eations should be of an active and ach an Elm, ae . ‘ stirring nature. Now to such (2 one no employment can | least three feet ‘by the time it attained its ath year. furnish exercise of the most a small garden. arish in the eine of Cardigan, to in favour of his wir ben he tithe of wood of above enty growtl tation. a lim ib from the trunk 24h ahs A. shock from ston i is in fact ang of a This will 2 RPE yeh bet cars ample matter to amuse a templative not stan time provide The years’ h, if _ pai not the — produce of the acorn, argued geod anne into a few shoots, the la grow faster om big > ny in mbs staf tres under common circum Now before us collected at pandas, show the following ra rte yr growth: The White Oak or nearly 9 inches in 20 years ; the he As ria? the Hertfordshire > Elm 63 ee Walnut or now ‘gave his a are _ His 4 inches } £, 3 - in 11 ; and the Lime Tree 4 inches in 8 years. been shoots from health the under the statute of | a 45th : Baer Mh, a oe Pp gros bois fro m payment of tithe, of twenty. years. Court was, whether ti trees of above twenty years’ growth were titheable, because growing from old stools. The statute 1 case a — v. Hayward (1775) was the first in opposition to a : struction ge Sa ogg eee ee ae | pact met of view under which this nsider What is sylva cedua, or Tsit it wood that has been once cut down ich springs up from the sto la of trees _ We presume it to be be 1 w: ll Aat ag = ge —_ om wood of that vicarrntion, pis fos eestotlos sae tat, two to four or more years without pruning, —_ es yt, th when, of the ot: for the sake of hi: alth 3 pe o him also, a garden, ides being a souree of goad re ero Poors, as 9 s life, wi Seg vide al ent order ind not the least id nioomy pes a garden i saber that it will feria employment to him in his leisure or when he t of may be out of work, and serve tox wank at y stools they would ai grown | ? | potaon shee beers tno ane. pena thee leans agetio expense of their health, tation, 3 But the cottager adorns the little plot of ground before his house, not only to his ow provides an invigorating employment to i t he assists to raise the aa a of his country in the eyes of , and | duces i. favourable opinion of his own character passers-by. ‘I we by the field of the ghee and het the vineyard of the man void of understan: ong 3 former, and : it is the stoo five or five hundred gl old. Now in rest ae which prsivtar Pp it is the oe with thorns, and nett “ha pene the face thereof.”” And as it was int the eer of Solomon so o it is now; the of the character of “he ne ere IF “the garden is lected,-dirty, cultivated, it is rare that industry, will be found within. While on this subject, 1 cannot mp expressing my regret that public gardens, 1 are in themselves calculated to tion of the statute As the question an, abd ent wel a abovi and Spanish Chesnuts that have been planted in this half ove case; andif so, all the Oaks | spring up, one is selected, to form the stem. It one pt of the inhabitants of our a towns, should by i impolitie ors See ris have become in — abt otter and acorn,” but must be regarded as coppicé-wood in the sense a ee ae ‘hip PP satin Iechuitaly | in which that a seems to have been cine take tale thems them 30 mechanic , and where stron or pure so little dange these e stablishments, where is end is vaapeioes pore cited, ot Bes € fo! country for timbe: n liable to tithes, if the decision atest the ‘Lord Chan- cellor had not negatived the plaintifi’s a THE ARBORETUM. No, I.—Taz ys Oax.—lr is now generally d its produ ucts | bark with the sugary i to the surface. We are not with the honey dew of tl unacquainted t y de country, but we know nothing of its occurrence the extent Saye of the Manna Oak in Armenia, - | Mr. Brant, H. M. Consul at Erzeroum. Hear what he one eons « of the and steep them from fittest scene and virtue which he was to nade 4 exhibited, groani meee "| Spring cucumbers, Ta =| aan my gent * 36 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [N° 3. foot wide, and then forming the two sides of the trough | end the house is closed by led, that i fit fe — finer d f carpen. t with se on edge, the whole being so cemented as to peesany projections for ov peg ap fe vg at “ try. We are not a of these species having | hold wai called the agp” -house by | — sgorwe north aa "Ross. shee. t Coul, the seat P I y fat h of | two doors. The hea: apparatus consists of a boiler enzi ii t Mf i ding fi he boiler which | (Fig. 2, B) at the aon Be and of ls pes running through height of “about 18 feet, em has stood very severe wea heats a stove at a short distance. The hot water flows | the wate — — the slate shelve ther, h. The vines es Nobilis, along the back and front of the pit, but E the return ‘ Pipes | “ The h ng apparatu: Paneth Butcher says, ‘‘is found Sabini, and Taurica, together with Abies Morinda, a +) i i pean e both of the | growing eon Jo ; Sa ess, however, hints ew water, or pew 50, | as circumstances may require, by } house and oft the lake and ‘als of water. The circulation | shall p may be difficult 4 Boy ave oo means of a small pipe that leads to the omtule. Another | of heat t wal “, communicates suf- | numbers to clothe our rane, les late Mr. Knight suc. . small pipe is laid i in the bottom of the troug’ h for letting fic ient warmth for the ‘double paren. ale crea’ ting an eva- ceeded in grafting so’ of them n the larch, and it ig stagnant aie imGee’ “th . og o 3 S aS" faye 2 = & of F for in very dark weather a ing ge heat i is ested at itable t y syring a coi This, however, i is too expensive a method to admit of j its _ The a oft The of + + W, } 7 7 ft +o sks soil that I grow my 7 an 2 f the plant-sti connected their bearing seed must not be too ‘sanguinely entertained, re ae of et maiden —- sah and eonka by th built up in narrow Pang a layer alternately ¢ an | of some importance, as 3 it allows rage placing i in the plant- sade For example, there i is. a Spanish chestnut, tree in in “ equal quantity of Segoe and a good i f s-shire, straw. When wanted for use it is chopped up ak when of rest. The boiler is formed of _ by that height from the ground, yet never bears se seed ; . spade, is not sifted, and one third of well-decayed leaf- deal pipes garde ced in rows alternately above each other, vast is very remarkable, this splendid ¢ tree bore none in . mould is added. eated by one or two fires at plonrare. e heat ing 6, Tn ord I wibstnra was _constructe d by J. Weeks junior, in 1839, poe chestnuts, plants from wh ich are ‘ni growing at the seed at three sect tee, ie ry 20th of Sep- aati cog b well the purpose for Tr Coul. Tt i is not owing so much ‘a the high pore of tember, and the 5th of A poser second tended. From the — well as 3 from Scotland, even the most northern parts of it, th sowing I fruit in No. — and the third TW plant out. tend ‘in the centre of the do not ripen well, of 7 cinterepton In placing the plants in the fruiting e- I first add a daceee in n bask: ets and on ral me ‘wood 5 on a two ae f the sun’s rays by the vapours from the th Sea and quantity of larg which com e Atlantic. In respect to sunshine, — climate of Pp f turf g p n pots.” North mp was better some 40 years ago than it is _ The plants put suffici «Those of your readers pe og forctlar now. Wer ba to shine fully during the inches of the top of the y "so pe the eu may ee affairs during that period, , may remember the m rizes | Summer Asef months s, nothing else is wanted ; for thed up as they ad growth. When the p hich | e soil is src and the pee generally mild, on are filled with roots, a good supply of water is given of | and as this fact forbids the charge of gies boact ion, Twill accoun’ = of the at of the a — of Scotland f the air they i poisentberd our mode of treatmen| t by taking the genus | to the But unhappily as the summers have become — 2. z. 1, pe 1 aneibedhitenamtl aki Jants - | less geni vi ters maha eae It has that the bottom ar mabe pot is about four inches above mencing th (ge nerally about the month of | been shown by Mr. Knight, that the greater the cold to — the water in the trough — and the return pipe. The race. a yom of of suitable s size is so three parts full of | which plants are exposed during winter, so that it is not h train porary and the fruit potsherds, and the remain nder ie Site peat, which is | too severe, so as to destroy their eae the more easily of Fy pot. The | are they excited when warmth approaches. Heat without st cut first 4 No- | plant is then secured in its oe ieee with small ash ts light is of no use, as is now well known. It might bea vember ; from that date to the 4th of December I have | close peat with pegs of wood. I prefer | good speculation for any one to make an attempt to i — or three plants, forty beautiful | close peat for this San as I have found it do Keer ies Douglasit from from twelve to | than in lighter or brous peat. The plant so Mini math native egos b in same plants will continue | is then placed in perce serena —— redhat ree sori —Having flowered the Poin- ing till about Christmas. I have just begun to cut | ranging from sixty to seventy degrees, th anaes wilde a pulcherrina bate = Se than I have seen it from the second sowing which will continue bearing | moist, the plant kept moist, and more liberall 1 bel ture. Lrsises through March. The plants of the first sowing ith wat it advances in growth. When it. has com- plants pln a ee (like + omy ‘foe hard ripened — thrown away at Christmas, and plants of the third sowing Snape its growth it it is removed tot the e plant-stove, where wood of last year, and repot t them in sandy loam and a i are their keeping th —~ s ? then ' I plant in a bed, I form the bottom of the bed but th ‘allowed to become | a low stove, as near the glass as seu rh They do pty i 2 quite pe wg At remains ; until it again “commences well in a greenhouse or pit in July and August, if kept | growth, et ee same routine as before.” sak i giety-de Wik detested toon: pat into the e stove in é i E : i i 5 E ge ‘ # z u z 2 : ie “EL AL tek con aa me auf ai q i plant oie en, 4 plant in flower here § across the bracteas (which is is the exact size it is said to & Distlacdalsh. ), and is fast — extending, ‘and of the most ee scarlet,—the leaves — large an and of a beautiful gr 5 ‘iniiees “across, but is not s0 j showy, _Aphelandra cristata may be m anaged the same te Hi i eB i i | tention “ir on it.—W. Tillery, WWelbeck. came p it in sald: and transverse eels ith solutions of differ- ent salts, to see whether any of them would destroy the ; moss and prevent its growing again. Several appeared to ; in : uced ps mate, d pare of copper tolue Piriol). The first two seemed to kill the moss immediately, but they also turned it se 1 1 irely disappeared, and at the end of the yeah when the rest of the walk was again co carpeted, ee Re spondents to take up the sul abject ; and Ishould think it ss) cmerrewg Sorpehengen npegen °F * some ges oet tauren in keeping ®°— —As I see you profess to Lae. ed your newspaper, “ Notices and criticisms of work on the subject ech botany and Bg) suet uas appear,” I trust y: excuse my €X| pave ig a will do ing more than givé JOU" of , ee a ee a ee ee ee Ee Jan. 16.] THE GARDENERY’ CHRONICLE. 37 hope it will prosper. But if you are lazy and negligent, oe then I —— = will _be soon — by a fa tter k do | breach than the observance.” honoured in the ‘It is ate the destruction moderate calculation, he anys, to estim owever, have remained nearly air-tight Jong enough t he ave stained the same effect as paint in — the man. Yo el so I th of ho olly-t trees at seve eral a s of twenty-five years’ growth | evaporation of the juices of the wood; this, a por is you. I shall now proc —— to =a you — your a, fo ppl y of f the metropolis. Add to this | the onl — al fas difficulty which oceurs to me.— for I expect yout to print this, that I do not press this upon the damage done to i A. Ainger, Dor street. your attention thus in the very g mistletoe, the season prises “tistsibated by the Lauded cultural Society, on account o ir p' Ap PLES.— Summer Golden By an. exce ms v's Boerne a han PEARS.— ise. this is not so gritty as the Old pS abancas “~ it o ey that os ies tea but sparingly on Winter Crassane how wiper ps ~ of th » but is ‘meling and buttery ; in pra Piu —Coe's Fine La if Royale Hitive oa —_ the Green Gage in purple plums ‘ef their 7 aso) R i} ot as the oe considered the very st = plum. Claude Violette ; nearly a fortnight earlier hay Rei Cuerries.—The Late Talore ; not so sweet as the _—. Duke, but much larger, and very of abbreviations. Best 50 yal in 6, 9,12, 19, 24, —_ 36. Springfield ae % g- 8 -g Amator, poked se. Sir W. Middleton, g. v. ugly Sprit ngtield eto g. un. ¥> &- I, g- Y. ing, v +8 Seonta of of oe Plain, v.g. eg # Salis yg Rouge et Noi President of the West, v. g. un. Maria (Wheeler's), Lc Nicholas Nickleby, g. un. Penelope, v. g. un, Rival Saskex ,g. Bowling-green Rival, vy. g. v.&- si Sv. un. Hope, v. g. Andrew i a Ne plus ulfra, v. g. ¥ellow Defiance, v. g. Advancer, g. pe 5 me co ising, v. g. un, nservative. Anno ot Lisle, Climax, v. g. Duchess of Ri chmond, Francis (Jones’s), v. & Lord Dudley Stua: Blodmabary Windmill Hill aires ¥. t 36 ‘Dablias sent out i in 1840, in 12 and 24. Felitaope+ ; as un, Metella, v. g. Yellow Defiance, v. g. President 2 West, v.g. Pickwi Nicholas Nickleby, v. g. on. v. & rs v. & r Ri »&- un. noe of #f Nottingham, & Rienzi, v. g. 9 &. Bedford Rival ahareny first rate Grenadier, ishop of chester 2d rate ; Charles xi, (Pamplis), g- an, ' Maresfield Rival, g. Defender, g. un, armen (Foster’s), g. un. Phenome Regina, ¥ Maria, v. g- a. “Grand Baudin, v. g. servative, Vv. g.un. of the va yg 's), §. ¥. un. set ury (Pamplin), ¢ eden Sub es — Bishop of Salisbury, g. un. ones, uth Hants, g. Vv. un. . small . un. g&- good—v ood—g. un. good, but uncertain—g. V. Un. do. very good, but small. Ra ‘ae ee, EMORA Hon. and Very Rev. Last night wet one of "he | 20 years; the therm — it only fell to 10°, us plant i is in flower, from th Palle it Eustephia a ane ng, red below, with all the Sesaments green upwards. It —— ieaves, which ape! at the approach of winter, ht gree the ends hanging down leaves of the coi and it is Santee teh, glint: wilh ctiet aint as much asi 1838. Magnolia grandijtora has been more affected by than it wasin thatyear. Berberis Aquifolium 1s 1s also i ‘jured.— January 12. Mount Edgcumbe.— This truly beantiful place © had heard o: climate and extent, for poe valiat undant . | be a fine place any ithout the sea, or its o a s oy gan Inte: on hag mate = — . Be advantages. Itis now,I am happy to say, in the hands of pos- —— os pees well deserving of cultivation ; oo gestions hase efijoy, and consequently to preserve t bearer than the Common Bigarrea’ and improve it; and from having been rather neglected for some > the & fruit is larger and darker col years it wants a little judicious ment for a time. br trees of all sorts, native and foreizn, are noble specimens, wn in High Lat Latitudes. —The observations Ae Mr. eile of 18 ere aac tholigtt’ GF ¢ aee and size, require ¢Pherson cutting and pruning msi f —— mastery Ne hak i —_ are woods, are breakin ei ee age, thous! of Fort Simpson i in North Aerie in Lat. ‘oe Ty x. are dingly interesting in excee with the fac t that ; bar ley t th form an advan ntageous p- te n temperat of January 1838, the caliiet ee mas nearly 20° mae | below zero. The aay temperature of June at 2 Pp. wt. was 73°, of July 70°, of August "65°, of >a x 60°, of — ober 28°, excluding decimals. e late Frost.—The injury done by the late cold w Foe eannot be at ates — mage We, pes ae not a. sot seri ) well ripened, and the ke mis pie ceded _the severe weather of last week had they are erfully Hetmeeuse in all stages a growth aod asd decay, The e: “ashe se are filled with a profusion of the broad-lea) —_—* which I think the handsomest sort; cent bays i ex, por dena the agen 009 boa Seotc! ant ¢ edar: and fine s: be ae of grow 6 prised me in the “south of Europe, eats and oa eal gait mae ae JAN. ae THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 39 ma varium, the flow ceedingly OZE: brighter —— than th e ides of which ov ae arger original. The plant was raised from seeds sent t A Som iy Se from the Swan River colony. beautiful flower. The iron conservatory ee pe ie = injury from the severe _— and the evergreens —Jan. and of a much space surrounded by large orange-tre presume, the dou! ale purpose of retainin is sum), a acaaaee growing erescrr on and having “the rees—answ g the rt ering, w see em Peg t description | of trees for the purpose of mg ound well-formed heads, or plants trained en que- | revsers or dwarfs in the usual. bush fashion. devon imme- di | be repar red by nual os the open air appear unharmed. RMebiews. The Eastern Arboretum ; or, Rural Register of all the nthe County = en | bongiiticel to be To the = Mn Grigor Reems this our British" mournirt “to think it deserves ; to those who un- Is tree,’ _ we recommend | 5 r the world at iate effect, honge should for pruning e, two, or ¢ r roots pon reduced, n hei by digging a ‘inah: ro the trees, and removing all ia roots by: means of a vaca spade. Inthe course of f fibrous Toots will be fo rmed, whi ch dervalue the scenery of the W: “* At present, few peo ae iti is very often c Norfolk. By James Grigor Tusivated by Drawin of Trees, etched in Copper by H. Ninham.— Long ; London; and Stacey, Norwich. 8vo. i Jn to VIII Tuovucu lying n the marie coa: v5 and e sed to th cold orfolk ii of the pe counties ject, we maintain there are eauty it possesses. see an certain bid costaad ple only a cumberer if ae f Se ao n- ut short in its career be hg it | large aera 'S are Though a gloomy 2 f situations which n pi ind the ball roe pared down, to a whether making their ir escape from it. ——_ circular mass of soil is aa stadt each tree a slight depression i in the ae Or oe of England, —richly w wooded, ak ‘watered, thickly spotted and ruined her words, the trench i s not quae _— in; a this hice country seats, and a model of ieultu ne skill Tt tower it has a charm which even the _pine and cypress | circ sie furrow is filled wit h liquid m 3; OF common uld be, therefore, difficult to select better oliage | dung may be laid round each tree = ae autumn, and f thi i ds t with the solenaley of such places than a the rains ie Ef nf Briers, or drawn _ The author stated that slargiom eful ha aring Foi } aa oe leew pi r of man, by a right a ledge, in overcoming shore ditions, and converting a barren solitude into a fertile r siden f for such situations i in all sirilnns comnteien: eS | by the worms. 13 ema a l are cens sure “No foreigner, ins isited 0 distriets, would believe that the pa which “contain :s with plums and cherries At the » May I, a Report | pay the financial mre of t the Sait ~ the Year ending 3ist Marc The need 0. course, Mr. Grigor’: '$ wor me, tches local, censists of details that the Norfolk puy are chiefly comeenied eat ut it also embraces a variety of where =e storm and the Sepa riot as they may. It bie einai nd numerous facts to whi _ persons pa obvi 0 every one, that a few trees would’ not only having country-seats should attend. For uses which | afford shelter to such B araagy but induce birds to perch e their _— 3 the the uchate shows to have produced their sok pay in Norfolk, must, lead elsewhere to the same con iclus and residences of that county, apply with equal eek to other way, parts of England. The author is an —— tin his w: and, like all writers of that class, i is apt 2 be led i once loved ape HH. upon t he vagant ; ; markable instance of which occurs in his grassy to me grey and ven fash foliage or lead yew itself, ‘are in there and gi we be “rm what real use “ ina nee of a bird would be n such ation ?’”?— But surely Bavisad are fee mee of f green ckirclivaiis Scat- fered o over | which are pre melt all Ay solemn i the restin, ose we covered coun and yi "the nds, | bag thik shadow ¥ nei, 3% ab) nd in wer, the ighbouring trees, the any places the oso di stricts the com sccout of Feldorye Park—a place on which, he says, “* Hea en has | and 7 ink th, Mr. Geldart, Neoneleol it about “17 years ago, and converted Scottow is a noble 8 specimen of the pees He At _— and m cottage wall. « Against Lah nst the wall of some cotivlldings is li. 7s. if allow: nce 2 be ma ade > for the arrears of 1839, not Predict the vould Nave peer h receipts of the year exceeded th 8397. 7s. . 6d. Tn addition to bonds the year on ac of the new conservatory. onded debt of the ety was #5 ~ e same time the property of the Society w ased in value by iit Rogers, on etter ily give a few ex th t ligt that the land in hood. ; in part a bog or rather swamp, Sica ko Pyracantha), clad with large bunches of bril- ‘tracts. bp peat “othe things, the a oriaee har de apd i a0 the about it; andin At a rising slope of bad : Pe cee my no means ill-suited to planting. There is, however, in bar sy so much goo! od si sn sag? os good feeling, and gene. r. Grigor’s book, that we cannot quarrel even with his ignaihes io Such a work is not suited to a Erinal 2s examination ; we, therefore, content ourselves with a few prorat to shine the general fogs and manner of the whole. ‘The history of trees, sb e author, ‘is coeval with Our first ents in Para aradise shad their Ayr we sight, were lost at the fall, en has survived “this wreck of all things to interest us in ‘their They come 2 a us hallowed e P' — ot man. A +h + +h + of serves more ge in len, ngth.”” beauty amidst the desolations of November, and de- ulfure It covers a space of 24 yards | general d. hat will get up heat i ina etme aad pb ya the ritter of the easy test of xeellence in a hot-water apparatus, by i z water vga be ergs iad bats _Upon tw ¥ ers observed, tha ere an “There is one thing of rege bare Na “si 8 works ortals call t in th sae ure, 2, aguating or ugly ; pein that if t Bnei intended 4 t to PA ai fanc’ thought of are wn a "ee oor short- ‘es ed | he poplartee, plang ns other objects clined t ae ? of those park eh persons Wher when rare of n tural objects, call thing pela —_ ss, and 80 0 ratus is pro- ee can sdifons be effected el. Peaioat avatola beg bhi dk uch an Without & an extravagant waste of fu certain va am hapten ied ii rfections is tree, or anything else oF the | kind ility in different from what its Mak mperfe would ytain it are inches in diame ae ge will also la: ce if properly pt or, in fut, Bae nea for the aste of heat heey the chimney, vies 8 es under such «3 interest upon eatth, and loaded, as < Neots, wit Weg uite agree with Mr. Grigor in what he says of the std rapidly, fi as much fuel mberd t hich is ofte derstood. ary by a ipa’ T - * the beginning’ “of the beautiful apparel | tom Demadetl tinea adh pr — ae alae reese oe Scart i | zealous of the honour of his apparatus. es Rogers co which eg put on in her dewy infancy, pe yet she had-} 43, trees i% eady observed, Muskau vg thir - it is too become estranged from her sae = , When her happy ttering.’ Cobbett repres St. it as ‘a great ugly tree;’ pik shall contain fuel enough to pens the pipes on home was the garden ‘ yas af Saag imilaé Tan says it is ugly. wil Pm eat as they can radiate duri g the ene and __ Spee aking of the Haw pr many varieties i in the | little hesitation in stati t what is here said as to the which Tis} be depended be oe hs and we find some "4 as ag ah a asad fuel is put in meri in which we cordially agree. Sarely the White-thorn, a 9 it Pri a gi is caaue In ning the pro aie "that should be borne by . 4 pais dividual the su nat pipe to the surface of glass, the author re- -* — beer trees which pleased us most of all, and which anyother gens gro so pis “hee gree a ferred in terms of great praise to Mr. Charles Hood’s offend by their formality. All ost valuable treatise on hot-water apparatus pohap 5. rep czy sufficiently in the present ders: and which Heating ‘ofthem, therefore in lines and avenues, or whe! he observed, the most preposterous blunders were z aig writers have attempted to depreciate— 6 mean ‘the | over = the bloom is spread over ent: in too much bias No. X. y of those miore recently erected err im the opposite ba = ane so that it must be so, w e suppose.” Ayoruer Number of these Pr: s has appeared. | extreme ; the err = not in the data desett, male ed wit inter olkham; once an oasis in a} We find i in tk man 7 igs well anaes of perusal. In| orin the calculations, but from assuming as the -somnag with rarely occurs i ¢ “In comm non We tay that the individual who Rie os lace, , there i s the substance of a paper by Mr. od hear oo air! a temperature which ae y y a blade of grass to grow where ots of P re 3 from | which we give the following no * pailding has time to esol down to a. corresponding none existed befor sie actor to hiscountry, Whi eet: It appears that, in consequence of the confusion | temperature; a power of 30° for greenhouses and of take: Likasines tea —- € our high appreciation of | in the a of pears, the author was induced to plant | 45° for hothouses is, in Mr. Ro pinion, ample re ea oe physically and cons: specimen trees of all the varieties he then seemed hat under any circumstances. urged that it is whiclr spring from a vast tract of ture being | fearing | Cea much ground would be wasted i the experi pve easy to work an apparatus below its power, and brought into such keeping, teem with such ent, that such an atrangement is economical of fuel,—which, fetal is now stretched around us? ofthe simple an- superabundant growth, and inducing early fruitfulness. within ‘certain limits, is sgl but if t aie of pipe n — in = en ss, th necessary, the ans — ie at i ie sited, ain dag tas ited plan firm Ment soil in his nursery, if removed one 0 pen ul pei ecorated, and inhabi fn ie middle of the consecuti ively, acq uired a stunted and pro rolific pics if | the fortace ord fo n, and a — waste, insteal of ay — ry, by Tho meow Drege sce of Leicester.” ii ] necessarily re oan it reign open barren estate; a deseri trees fi e a emovals | " ie M 2 me d to thi great im which a to us all that is cheerless and uninviting. tees inthe ses sa estat be ent rae — 4 = ssion, 7" i pase coil niverted to am. : fe of. ipo Under the han d of impro vement, howe ever, this 5 | in apples. But in. attempting to remove his ‘pear- -trees, n th p use for prdenan most eff ave tral author coi that it would be | ble t tual mode of prod i i as: of country, either meery with the best of ti inber—the Seat a trench round them, and cut all their root able surfaces of water above the | level. of the Pies which. ko > ie awey f this respect Phi a ‘ mean cultivated, garden-like fields, ” ‘falfilled. S nid : were completely pecimens of ‘various temperature of the house. The troughs commonly em= At Mr. Peter’s, of Westwick, the author found there Kinds of pear-trees thug t PE yed are — only in as far ——— i was a very food p by covering a circle at | of the author’s views. _ toe tian small, and becoming quickly empty; afford 40 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. [N°: 3 — supply. To be really efficient, such troughs ought | o be at least one foot i in width by five or six inche es in ded ‘ Revision’ of the order, the nu and dead quote inthe inten pi h, affordin ng some ething like one ep foot of water = 7 ae 15 ia ee feet of glass in the roo’ of. Th Orc! munica | numbers, they will = pred a appears, to pe on , a still greater ean of water is desirable; and for this purpose rae sgeinrae fixed immediately over pe Hemp pee = - _— as the front shelves, a and fro Marna S OF CONTENTS. SU In our Jeading article will be fo und an merarant of a t to l “an y ee Theis emt will always exceed that of the house Pa the tithes of wood. ——aA paper by Mr | a few degrees, and the great s affords an abundant | ner of — Winter Coceabers is well deserving per- al, as urface though gradual supply 0 of moisture; ne act also as par- = sult = e — niet of an excelent —_ tical aquatii culture of these ines vier * ecome src eatined, ‘oly on account of an almost ene failure i in managing t this Ealing Park, where such n wit! nthe ‘Orie ta e at plants, am ae stove 3 and failure has" entire —s in which the ey: are grown. In tk are introduced, they re pasar y. pr ovided more — ition in which they are star and a asc! College, given London.——The memora rmada de rhe the attention of persons interetel 1 than ornament ; the the mate of a om “4 are constructed, forbid their bei ed ; and, i water 3: 1 _— house. Under these circumstances no tend will flourish :° bat if the cisterns be placed pe ihe viens, recomm ended, ‘and formed of. slate, their te rest of os Proeeings = the a aa CE fone we have give’ mo +h ature of the penis ill maw in we te in eae peta v a short of Mr. Rivers de of managing wart vt tect and some ex ia from a ighly- interesting paper by Mr. Rogers, upon heating Hothouses. ALENDAR OF OPERATIONS for the d sprsape ce! Week. se focengssraail Botanicus, seu _Synonymia Pla stow that severe frosts and cold winds prevail heat &c. A atiaveal Sipualipers | tion our readers against their effects upon plants more es- ‘of Plants : : ponarrmdcs: sf a in P scneceneg al order t pecial oma @ young Prnwcrnecty which regia: suffer eats injury her gene’ + eplbaite, given | from p g winds than from frost; these, therefore, should be Z *-Rnkaind protected y cove nee of mats, straw, fern, = such Rnpeth — rials as the gardener may have command. In th a Writers. Pare. - coat, M.D. 2d Edition. 8vo. | ment ‘of glass stru we would impress the p Rood ring of amplin, Lo L —VL using =a for oe the: = et a little eo - possil OUGH & mae catalogue of names, and ther pone of the most unreadable of betes yet this work is of considerable importance he the e plants | of either gardens o eatery It is a gion (Be Senate injure vegetation, by causing a w ty shite ehute time is meray by the tent is capable of } owing hicoeter their uns nk path. That such re- e merited by writers like Spach, and a few eral they are undeserved ; for nomenc fre- is not such a question. ‘The The fect is aut, eae in the names of plants which to discuss whatever cause, changes r. Ste’ uudel’s k is intended to. alleviate this evil, by Sotlestiae in alpha abetica Foal all the s that have been publish on oa a das > — th Test vi i To names generally ado; ; e best li As cmon i Pe e fis: | -4 ee see ouble plan of giving the ed name with ail its synonyms on- the one hand, and the synonyms with the recognised names on the pe Thus, suppose a — wished to find wr ap , he would | on turnin oH. _ ascertain that seq! ealthy cement < —— and blossoms, siegie Selieae and ultimate hee = other store plants and cuttings; use every means in r to prevent damp, by watering cpaninely and on cae b a ——s Tube-roses, and other bulbs showing indications of growth should be immediately potted and placed in heat; sow R: nunca. i and plant roots in pot ng. Out. Door Department. ect regularly-all half-hardy plants and beds of florists’ gemean aie the weather aN continue all ground i improve- ments, s' such as planting, pruning, digging borders, and layi ag urf. ~~ RY AND FOREST rena Di sas 4 tect ee evergreens and seedlings; ¢ Dg 5 turn pyst toe ae the pcr it thei e = 1 ber qu bole of the plant, using due caution not to lace San the but if this should inadvertently happen it is of minor conseqne: a d stump protruding ; it should never be necessary ti crocked ; som: ous of cutting their pone forest- trees, but this, in ae anion, is mare absurd than not to plantthem whenit may be done with advantage.—Joseph Paxton Chatsworth. ig aap GICAL NOTICES. Continue to turn up the earth and bible for the grubs S of the cockchafer; and raharine rainy or sev ue op Should be stirred. Lh wera lineatus), its is slender, re aaet smooth, brown colour. It remains five yea! in rub s! stare and pias tpg at devastation among ave ore ms, and other plants, and is so well known to ina pas Ba ey it is only ne. a few words as tothe best manner of getting rid times to such a the ground, avon w again. ue that they aly they ar per f and the h, there are many othe’ should be destroyed at this season ‘whenever they are four: for example, the cocoons of the dart-moth (Agrotis segetum), one of failure ascertained fact, that a small proportion of sulphur: each naling which is given out largely from many kinds the most pol insects to winter grain, and which will form of erg proves Popeye to tender A eg in a few hours. These | the subject of our next notice observations course apply principally to houses heated by é se on tran” eae BF |Site of te eat ea, Lan fy, een eg Ze hot ti steam, the same objections do not become so appa- re ty hiswic f rent, a weakly growth is the quence of ahi tained by fire-heat, whatever plan of artificial BAROMETER, i! THERMOMETER. E 3 heating be adopted; and wethereforerecommentd in all cases where Sea, : Wind. | Rain. eee aka ee a ec prcee caee canecaenry | Frey 2 “20308 9.066), 20° | 6" 13.0°| NeW “ ay i We We som ings at Chatsworth constantly 3 at ight, nt, which Satur. 9 | | 29.7 738) 29.441 | 33 27 30.0 8. es from 10 to 15 di difference in the temperature of the Sund. 10 | 29.247 29.089|| 39 31 35.0 S.E. 40 | houses where they are applied, and to maintain which without Mond. !1 | 29 9.064 23.864 | 39 33 36.0 | S.W. 02 them would consume three times the quantity of fuel now neces- Tuesd. 12 | 29.578 29.364)) 39 22 30.5 | S.W. vy; but of these, and their cons ion, w ll have to Wedn. 13 | 29.563 29.324), 38 32 | 95.0 E. +29 ak more at large. nother evil to be guarded against at this Thors, 14 | 29.398 29.176 3 32 34.0 E. 80 season is the too ion of cold air, which, if the heat is maintained by the aid .of coverings and small fires, it l be Average [ So. 497 29. 30311 3 34.8 | 26,1 | 30.5 1.51 ly sary to admit, except under thesun’s influence; am 8. Very severe frost, continuing throughout the day, with il rem from theill = Pion mares which i -dleeeny of noxio ars generated by acu, than for ‘ ili ae us Vapo' ene of the plants, which it is purposely given to benefit. —KITCHEN GARDEN AND cece ARD. =| would ie: r names had also been of the importance take the well-known re d ist, given to that — As an of this kind o' f information, let us genus” . It appears, there are 76 -of species to be found in books, but that of this number 44 are os ma ire synonyms, and other. the oh P The — aa “ag ors p ‘Phe work would have been = hele since ught elose had the subject been less difficult, or a ace less examination. It has, however, proved a most task to analyze h the neces- sary care so eon r lants of a very intricate iad the author’s other engage- have left ian it te leisure for the grom sams of this inquiry, se. it has. been icable to advance with greater speed. This explana ec fo au ts friends of science whose cojlectio ns have been en- trusted to the me for all this With revision ay the order, which author will be teful for a econse- sedis collin on, to be retu to to not be expected to return the correspondents may send for names, @ full liberty to incorporate them with | 7 unless some express arranges 3 : He will, however, in all cases -Door and Forcing Departmen In Prvery,— Supply ead pti tecber « § to the acne now in es na ema seta together in the war: ad part of the house eat caution with the pho during boisterous weather, as cant pines by over-heated flues during windy w than bs Lond = - time. Vim inue to keep gentle fires in the -time wher still ne — air at the ae time: rub of as they advance, and those left fruit, 3 use more ather meer | foreright and ill-placed cai and have made but short ben this happens, thinning sweet and all occa by frequent turnings ; become free from disagreeable citavia, a8 the tole made me perature becomes steady in the hills of soil at_80° or 85°, = be trusted in them. Sow Melon-seeds of 1 case of failure When the r permi fature crops ote digging, trenching, m Cassaces.—At the earliest st opportuni some < of the largest plants from the seed beds of Earl ws Bag toe Brg he Carrors.—A few may be so siteao ) i Horseranisu.—Make new plantations ; plant crowns eighteen inches ooh ind with a dibble, and cover them with old tan or very pone ase i A smali — sho leaved kind, in a warm sitnatio Por-HERsS, as Mint, Sereaon, &c., if required, should be in- troduced to the houses, in pots or boxes. oO edith: cok seth tables tee nailing ; pick uld be sown, of the round- boiled, to destroy the eggs of imsects; bg = clean bere and Lager simmer thea in linseed = 3 to prevent their rusting; the oil may be used afterwards for pain oe eH .—FLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERY. In-Door Department, Srove.—aAt t eet season a more moderate temperature should be maintained, especially during the night, on prevent a too early excitement a the plants; when as heat is kept low, the caution must be used in giving water. Gasexnovss.—Give abundance of Pair when the weather pe: and if becomes necessary in dull weather, fms it sparingly, and gentle fires kept during the day to dissi- Pase ine superducus moistare. and Framzs.—Coilect the dead leaves from dense fog 9. iidmies frost ; branche y hoary; sudden rise of tempe- ture from 11 to 32 degrees “hazy at re ori night. i ao Moi low. together found to be four-fifths of a State of ae Weather at Chiswick during the last 15 Years for the ensuing Week e: ons g@ the 23d January, 1841. ae : a Greatest/ Prevailing Winds. eo slee cigs Yoarsin quantity ; 7, tee Se8 sgé €& I lefe: bs ool 2 Zise which it of _|4 eomdac Jan. |2E°|2395\/=)| Rained.}| Rain ZF lal ial 14 Su. 17} 40.4 | 29,2 [34.8 3 0.11 in.} 1] 4] 2] 3] 1] 1) 44 M. 18} 41.0 | 30.7 |35.8 7 0.14 [—| 3/—} 2} 3] 3) 3) Tu. 19) 41.1 | 29.6 [34.9 6 0.37 a} 2} 3j—} 2} 2} 3} 2 W. 20} 40.5 | 30.4 [35.4 4 0.65 1) 2} 3] a} 2} 3} a Th. 21} 43.4 | 34.9 |39.1 7 0.34 |—} 2} 3} 1) 3] 2) 3,2 F, 22) 43.6] 34.5 |39.0 6 57 2) 3}—| 3} 2] 2) 3— S. 23] 44.1 | 34.1 |30. 5 5 —| 1b 2) 3} a} 4t 3 Phe highest degree of temperature during the above period, in this portion of January, are gy ane he 23d, in 1834, thermome- © 58°. © most intens as that ¢ i eo fros night of the 19th and peer ot “the 20th, in 18 mometer then be rec 43° below z under particular ci rostan meron The por Se destruction amo; pasta vegetation which this generally ae — res occurrence is hence 7 collect remarkable cultural annals of this country. REPORT ON COVENT GARDEN Lora FOR THE WEEE “ogg eats ae Notwithstanding the u - market has been folerably an a fresco ‘vith froit ant 2 flowers ; and vegetables are not scarce, though pene indif- ferent. Fruit.—Black Jamaica, Enville, and Providence Pines at? good, bat not plentiful; Queens are generally sm and ripe. The supply of foreign grapes is pretty good, and of rable quality; a variety ca sized Melons in the market, b t they are unripe. very ore the best vases are Golden Pippin, C prc. pin Sor don r Five Crown Pippin, American New Town Pippits Sear cocliant Potten a Ask, Ga. per Lemons is abundant, and the ve Wrest pote | the fe epas ou abe, oo weccnesgiarng yer ae mah 2s. cig White Broccoli is scarce, but the little in the market is purple is abundant. Sgvoys are plentiful, lity, from 2d. to 4d. each. Red Cab! JAN. 16.] THE GARDENERS CHRONIC LE. plentiful, from 4d. to 6d.e barat ch. Carrots are remarkably fine and abundant. Turnips ai ore plentiful, and of better auality than they were at the beginning of the week. Leeks are cellent quality. care kale is goo! app: aiid, do erved also three very fine Paci a beautifal Cypripe Laas ~— and good plants of Cin King a Hendersor p Vrahios “Eigucintiee and Na a ha PRI 16, 1841.—FRUITS:— Sea each, 3s to 5s fed CES, Sarvapay, Jax. pples, dessert, per bushel, Peyas 12s Puke esse, per hf. “sve 0 108 Sweet calmmaiie scan ae? Chesnuts, per = 4s to 8s Oranges, pr. doz. 6d to Sag uts. ss per bus per 100, 3s to ie ts, per — “Bitter, per 100, 9s to l4s Brazil, 20s — ee peer i fei Qs _ Spanish, 24s 10 12s — Barcelona. VEGETABLES, Savoys, per doz. Onions, Sot loz. 28 to 6s : gre oz. 2s as bunches 2s 6d to 3s CER Ww Ree a“ Red for ick: per a to 6s Cabba, age Plants, p, doz. beh. 3s to 5s Paonia Sprouts, hf. sve. 2s she 23 6d il igre German Greens, or — vet _ tol — Scco. Salsafy, per bundle, led Horse Radish, per eer 1s 6d to 6s Spinach, per sieve, oer cap vented, ya 6d for hres hrdaet 3s to 4s to Corresponden Tue mutual inpeteaaa of gardeners oo ‘their ap akon Broccoli, White, pr. bch 3s ros rue, or Small, —_ Green, 2s to kale, er punnet, 1 Potatoes, White, per ton, parts ce, pm score, ls —_” New, per Ib. 2s Endive, per score Jerusalem Artichokes, per half-| Celery, per bundle (12 to Is ti sieve, Isto Is. 6d Small Salads, per punnet, 3d Turnips, White, per doz. b., 3s to 5s Watercress, per doz. small bunches, 1s Carrots, per doz. Punches, Bs to 6s Parsley, per half-sieve, 3s 6d to po slated get doz. 6d to ls 6d Thyme (green) per doz. bchs, 3s to 4s Red Beet, a Is pore 2 Sage (green) per doz. bunches, 3s to Scussnere er bundle, Rhubarb Stalks, undle, isto ls 6d i ls 6d 2s sh 2 * L Morels, per Ib. Erefies acid, sae Tb., 12s. ma per Ib., 2s 6d to 3s Gd of these en nds, will e gladly re i lf-seeking preju iced, sonal manner ; but, on the contrar, ry, we invite fair pn sion Bs all I vided it is con- ducted with good feeling and ome temper. Iti is, i indeed, @s an cas make the Gardeners’ Chronicle of the greatest value There ew gardeners, and still fewer amateurs, who not on occasion require immediate information upo i But eith om an unwill as te a a too often fail t of. o obtain bag information Let all's ome uch persons commu with 2 stakisial “on what pel they ask them. The subs es £ a per: t of ch he to know. ,He is the wisest man who is conscious of his ignorance; for how little do _the wisest pipe now ! !—except that they know little. d with a fact, how- dence we requi balers however, a prac ractica his na sends a reply fo founde d up y thing f for which we are dispose the man pal ts t sure of our practical friends, are the ie tar § nowledgments for the m: Mr. Bailey has our warmest ac! We hope often to in which he assists our uw! ndertaking. from him If Mr. Feage L. wilt send a specimen of the kind of articles he whee contribute, and we think them useful, weshall be happy to a to his = We eo — not our own. msideration. argumen' eens cat p tines case 4 “Abies hies Khutrow, as om) the peeeee edwin Lined question is not what Mr. ha’ < pect bot wha originally fi azed with hgh = laps, and not rroof. The occurred in the of abridgme The hecti little epiphyte from Ruck: Odentogios sidietom, a new §| peigigs= = io 0 Roa oe uss Of the epiphytes tages essrs. Loddiges’ Dendrobium calami- forme is rew, andso is the B Epidendrum, which, from its = habit << Fimiey- 3 young plants at each joint of the old flower will b d E. viriparum. plant is Pimelea syliestris. Lady S. for the bouquet. If she she observés with m the operations of nature, she will always find Bess the power ohich plants possess of forming deep colours, is in propor. t tion he quantity of ligh' We quite agree with Miss F.im the fact she mentions; bat we arrive at a diffe ‘onclusion. t a plant will “*ourn up” when exposed to bright light in mhouse is bri, ; but in cal nm Of @ pane of glass between the a and the source of light must diminish, not | increase the latter; and a nie ane lant sarang less light than mB in question is produced ote dryness of theair, reo y be guarded against by moistening the greenhouse, by syringing, soap byt throw. ar Hoong oA on. the paved floor; or, which is much better, by pro- viding the greenhouse wi with broad shallow pans of water, from w prandiiiore jew A oem taking place. . G. R. G. R. will find his statement that road-scrapings preve’ the. clubbing of t the roots of cabbage-plants, ee bs Mr. She rwood, in his moot on the cultiv: a of brocoli, p f this does ro) ni disease ; whilst at thi its action as a ba will be strikingly evinced by their healthy and luxuriant er In very ol den-soil, full of decayed farm-y: RG. called sour, os will moaitionn find ita proc A Young Sandia will find a Chunk stove answer his purpose better than an Arnott, because it is less like a philosophical in- n sh ed horizot ontally NEWS OF THE WEEK. Two important documents have been — this ig —the Speech of the Queen of Portugal on open ari and = Message of the President of oe ies oa States, Mr. The Queen of Portr tat ‘the demand of Spain relative to the navigation - the that the Government has claimed from this country 4, et a to Lapeer apes from agyression that mea sures hav bee! o place the aie im. a state. of defence, sip = war ate mere = ed out, aised. But se preparations are hoped, mire an reed aaa and Sopestgiiis ae’ held out that the peace e of the Peninsula will not t be _ dist urbed. —The out a a of peace, and enters ‘fully i into the whole system fA _ pF } } & Be me | _* a +} pe of gas at The stove ae be placed ia - joints, Shick mu is a little below the level r o sses the desire of mall excavation, so that the fireplace the overt of the it. re r to the inquiries of the Rev. Edw. S. is furnished by a persslececinaeetio signing himself I. R. witnessed the good effects lating to the B y question express the g t it t final settlement as spee- dily as possible. The “Mess sage further states, that the I. R. has of the following compo- . sition applied to fruit trees; it ao ped — on hares in attention of the cor sai bs d that 7 ——- _ and c — the —— ped . _— oth, and nm to prevent that c being carried on under the 11.—Mix with a quantity of chamber-ley, or oe deaiiee of a j dunghill, lime, cowdung, and drift sand, each one gallon; wood ee erican flag.— nce we learn that M. Thiers has d coal ashes, sifted fine, each half a gallon ; and use the com- de his Report on the Fortieatons, and that it is con- position freely wit lai sh or small broom, spreading it e Government, with whose v ee.— d d that D ation of b Ss it agrees in its material points. “This result i sig tegar ats as aa fini _ gs riments on the preserv: s du He ho that 5 oe oe other pest ey ae bso favour the eae with some pony ical remarks on the nagem of those industri- us ins ecte. A Putron of the Ga ‘s’ Chronicle has pointed out a matter favourable augury of the stability of the present Intelligence has — Jaa that peace has od with RB a 14 pg an and as a Ministry. h 1 rdener. which we would willingly teak But he will find that we have already too - 00 little room for Horticulture, and that his plan | effect has arrived in Pari Ad would still further diminish it. All the information of permanent inferéat alrekay. atoye “MgROil tin! aecian epper gpl sgpieeeeniged that the my ncunag which hae ve so long existed between commenced ; and we hope he will not find it very troublesome | Romeand Prussia on the Pag 7 Bodeda stical affairs to jy ase the first leaf of the second half if he attaches importance are on the 0 ag bly terminated. ie 4 pi: R. will find an answer to his inquiry in Mr. Green’s paper | dispatch has reached Vienna, a, confirming the report n Cu si mrs Ts, published in to-day’s paper. If this information is not sufficient, ae will beg G. R. to write again s wa a fs ‘“ D. will find some observations upon the managem t of Cacti in seed pag: air : ae nmber. be va — rs — may oe At home, a ministerial circular has been issued to the is at of Mr. Bea’ OD, W! Ss e § - po! wl cinders within two jpches the top, 1 pad makes them a wis ary supp : government, officially announcing that Par- sand B apcidy ed - a little clean ee mach for. The pot geil ear liament will meet on Tuesday the 26th. Several remark- watered an) ie dkeds’ sown e ich as nd is ipcinkled jeetshensae win iuak Ol hg apcen etaheea thats: om eee af Leas wea’ 7? bath § in fhe metropolis and The whole is then down gently, and the pots are put by in any w place, where they The seeds will ah weer | felt b y the poor and by la- ate’ they make their little roots, and get firm hold of th il, after which they may pores and rooney heb sar nds the seeds to be own quite thin the fi instance, and not to transplant the seedlings till they 1 begi = to et crowded in the pots, in a y' These direction: e equally applicable to the seed: two. other succulents. We shall hope to hear from our correspondent C. J. H., near bade: ant = t sapprehends the étuert a Dr. hase xperiment. He pat no matter why, to save an old tree, and he found a better way of doing so Meat y employing Forsyth’s Composition. Casesmay occur where it paisa ble to save an old tree; and where quality is a greater bject than quantity o. chest of fruit it, especially of the green gage, such cases are not uncomm With regard to the other matter, the e was tit importance but it suits some per. the taste of other persons is jad not very different from that py poe Radford friend. B. inqui re ati gi sok he or some of our correspondents, can inform hi the follo kinds of tities are to be R. A. has not done wrong in tuki ing seeds of the Cedar of Lebanon _ of their coer for they will sustain no injury if kept in a dry as ould have been better not to have sown them j yet, e bas pero ays for his i eaae plants when they come rv to defer the sowing till apoio pce be February, ai be used should m calcareous lo; on other ee ae reed: we Chandler's Tilustra tions of Camellias ical treat the poe mg of these pla aie fib boures of all c our has reached town of a fatal a lesea Mere, on which 100 aege are said to but no particulars have been mies Wome News. —Her Majesty, Prince Albert, and Sl. Wi erent scare is still ‘a Sudbury- hall ; Her antedey has towed 507. on the poor of Windsor, and has contributed 351 towards the b uilding of S Whitechapel. Parliamentary.—Itis said that Lord Brabazon, member for the county of Dublin, and the Hon. Grantley Berkeley, shire, will move and second the address of the House of at the opening of the « ensuing session rf: Mapeh cgric ay Marchmont Pe D ‘ood practi Camellias are able t red pen tall a thin of branches, either Home, ] Bart., to this = peerage, which ea oe aie —- wring, crowded in Sadi bac ocean or from the soil about rivileges during t as Ses- their roots being in an improper state. Mas t cure is eed he ms of Parliament, and which has alread the cantly part of erie: fa January or February, shake eo hace z of o will, it is sour ball of earth which surrounds the roots, re-pot them in good un cgthened hearing zs pe ace i ts pyr fresh soil, and pl them in a mild bottom heat ; or if this is € fo ‘view he hance ; convenient, keep the house that contains them er cl immediately after the meet of P; Fs 2E, e shall lose important subject. known relates to such iy ve We hope to hear ir. + Billery ome on the effects of the We thank WN. very much for his Wm. H., 3. Saul, K., W. EB. pags a J. W. Portarling- ton, J.R., A Subscriber iat tate “Wales, Discipulus, Mr. Cut- bush, Philo-Orchis, will all have answers next week. Bika Reba Pa C4 TRG Rd, Lauder, D. Beaton. eee A ul now in his 54th year, is one of the paigners under Si John Moore ; was close by the “pe oa Corunna, afterwards in man ny of the principal actions actions of the w: is pide that he unites in his person the represent ancient ms of this sinee. Grea tofore aoe ed. In the process rous dangerous Sk wei ieee, cad the ie ae ee sig w ¥ pea my means of inteligihia ing d | numerable buoys. were laid down, and lig | along the coast. It is intact ten 42 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. a borne m5 testimony to the value of Capt. Hewett’s suggestion n these te 4 and to the clearness and pre- enues of Engla awarding 200/. to his widow. od tad France. ~The following Eng’ for the year just expired is given “ the French papers. It is dinions. for the a coun! rata m the official pub- , ee | t £124 — et ee — e latte The Customs. ‘ Stamps of 2 all kinds ni and assesséd taxes -office vr n la nds >ublie instiectio’ Various products a gwar - gy . . . . Extraordi inary means Woods and fisheries England. £493,858,500 fabs, 195 5 5000 165,897,550 5, 150, 200 314,384,300 sie: 720,000 98,661,100 392 764, 3951 11,025,000 45, 188,000 4, 187, 500 4,165, 500 3,942,9 11,398, 990 eeiiaate _ 57, 255, 292 _ 34,577,632 —__.. 1,118,660,000 1,184,523,365 Ui} eptf ‘ouda a corruption of Habib-es-Sudan, or friend of the Blacks) is destined for detached service, when n req aieed, up smaller nd esp r for sounding ahead of the other vessels in difficult or un- between atio’ decks has been eine by the erection of a ve pea | un half i in breadth, and eight inches i in thickness t-iron, about two feet and 4 tendin Essex, 5; in Cornwall, 4 ;"in Bedford, Danek 3 and in Hertfo rd, 2; Cumberland, and Foreign. Fra —M. Thiers’s had soak on the reach capit ital has arr ved. The less th th the fortifications of document takes up Pp the hag = * ‘Thiers estimates at 133 ( 320 1 Monileur ; an d it is said that bytes 4 oe characterised the ess ye oints ngteed on by the committee. The total pe yeas millions « of es ous concession 1 fE ae | Alemtejo, meeting: ere pe held, and siete S imager ously signed for presentation to the Cortes, to reject that part of the > Fegu ulation. Tn Bile dilemma, the advisers of ga ae gs press. The upo n the Report are expected to be | eee Ministry. a dewpaten, sented had thee wee d b state of ee a osphere :—‘ Mar‘ | been erent ee: Buenos Ayres. Poin a eaae be opened or cl ion at ‘pleas ure. The air is nch Government 100, 000f. ‘a year. paper: sult of the Commission is stisactory, and the debates the y vibe peg by and Buenos Ayres.—Gov esday the moe telegr: shia de vaisseau, who atrived yesterday on b will set ou i th w f war, he would area er terms. It is stated ‘that the ya surveillan cised over Don Carlos costs | the tis The Royalist Prints still acy it as a mere pretext to turn detache “Ry gots ainst Paris, and in this view wth ae si joined yt y admit that the favourable to unfavourable ie A.M. 5 es ul a is xty-five i have been planted on the ere the ships of wai o gid ong-stan who served in the "Portoguese. army duitig he no Pesta war and subseque tly up to the year 1890, Baty ng 1,400 contos de we (320,0002, sterling), in ten four- eo instalm Sra —The ‘apital nee perfectly tranquil, and art of the National Guard h; r’s day, as had been apprehended, An event has occurred in Madrid which is con sider ed likely + M. j ellano, who had exercised the functions of Apotolie ‘Nanci, although not aa invested with the gular pow nee the death o rchbishop of 4 4 eal. in 1835; and subsequently, without thority gg took upon himself the permanent dati les of the o » Madrid Gosette : of the 1 is expulsi sion, y means of a mee circular fa’ bebe hi is fs eet in inotigin b a band communicating to , the pe of the paddles, or, whets wher engine is not in play, to may be ar. ter wheel which PP he enti ny s department, may be thoroughly vaaillaaed; and the rs s company protected from the ill effec ts of the miasma that in con sh reg sure; but ondent says that i Te as been phos cititaly tadtaiety proclaimed by to obey ith munipal oh ey a whom ps had je et me ed to return to Spain, and claim the + bem efit of the espo by his public “adoption of the Carlist shee and his con- stant co mo munications with the leadi ing Carli lists ‘ _All be and by his fi The Prefect of Foi oix immediately proceeded to Palos, ALE, is private property is respected. The Tibunal vot the Rote is suppressed by the same order. The Gazette also y vailed among the poeoees and Wine fran inducing vn ch pre vessels are destined to navigate. Connected loth through Stich it is es whenever the ee malar nye oe suspected, the air shall tps previously to edit circalated by the venting appar st-Ofice Mi eae banker. ‘The | orders since the reducti ager ys ie Serhapemse mars at said to be abo: about threefold in London. cies in 1840.—The total pumber of bank- Bankrupt — in scars and soe 3425, being a of 342 over the year 1839, Tn matiufactures there were in 1840 hy m a com ts and eieaned ; area OF. e in tral rg vious cde In th were P26, ing a an excess professions a trades oO there w 208. In manufa ctures ‘connected with fo cotton sone pursuits of agriculture there bay an <8 in miscellaneo re 963 1839 3 ae in aie silk trade there were 44 being a decrease the excess of 5; and in miscellaneous manufactures 1 being a In of no less that oO 31, being an increase of 8 ; of dealers in coaches and horses bei i $- o pene there distillers 36, Bory. an jap of 11. In miscellaneous keepers = tuallers, re whic the suber ooh are 106, being 8 ve class o! bank reh sect ahi. Wakeins ship-owners, and pte! wholesale dealers, there wel f 70; Devon, and Sussex, ont wsalpaenie eee a decrease of 11. n agricul the bankrupts, vate the @ previous year there were 5; but in every other Fe emg 2 Tie head there was an in- on io ban The largest number, of 277, was in s Mubiens. beg on an Y { hir al of 35. In two counties the numbers for the two being 28 n§ actures connected with 20 lependencies count 60,000,000 of popula square miles. En gland and its depende ome of the papers give the affair between an English and a Frencl a ahi ip in a Red Sea, tary force. Their mel read a proclamation a Den Carlos, t hanking aon for their attachment, and recom mending them still ba place their reliance Tn God that better days might come for their cause. e Prince de elared in this oney-Orders.—The daily papers observe | sent to ve satement of the com mercial pro- ; that is, = 000, Done. =~ “fer own Indian posses 0 ines trade is 43,000, 000f. Inn renpatt of terri Pitty, “Rosia and its m f pals tion, 4 an ,000 square miles; France, 32 millions o population be 188, ag squ 0 miles hi f a mili- agers an order extending the benefits of the "amnesty jo persons in Spanish possessions beyon a.—Ad- ie fhe om m Barcelona mention that the new mols in that port *t has b been m the late storms, and any of the siaemy on it “Setroyet —The state of Cata- > £ Oash. finished oath of fidelity rs that she has d the Cape of ae d the Phi- jd th Turkey her ti on, and 5,912,000 ncies count 14: the sftiredendy conan uneasiness, There is, rt ie is con- | | ie Spoeret arm oa amongst all classes of employés. e that 3 port rtrait of the Du uke de la pare was fs be i he we hima 4 of that city, with a procession and all due ie ter At Logrono a statue is to be raised to. the Duke, matters are not yet _Sufficiently advanced, aes sulledtiptlog which ha that pur- ose having as yet only ail the small sum of 7, ‘200 reals (122) berg Arse e of Je suits at Loy ola has been efiniti vely clo f t 3 country, and without siiiclan time pe allowed for the students to joturt to their families.—It appears that the government intends to build at Passages six steamers of 400-horse power eac Avsrata. —A Jetter bro Pim states that Count a’ MM. Tt wf +h ig accoun of an funeral ot ibid» whic iron wares 24, being an 49, Icing an exeess of 2; a member of the Chamber of Deputies :-— A comm vessel _belonging to aera corey with six “se ic d entered in ere were 4 farmers the Arabs on the Elphinstone, one ak is East a cruising i 8 Bere same latitude, and ai with the of the cargo 0 of the French + vessel, , ordered The : d npere of the he Red Sea, when the isturbance The Reo ‘ich ‘peeraded France on rf: Te =o pany’s ships, uainted, no doubt, f brewers, maltsters, and y amongst inn brig refed t to -denist. Lo ane ship, which carried 26 guns, urse to An engagement ensued. After Be Sear aeages shots o "seid hours, the big me ras off, and ree sail = dagev 9 leaving the Bordelais master of the fi curacy of thi denied by the foo ig aad dpe eee, which affirm that aa Frak Cabinet Paakeumeds coeat d’Appony has bee een again instructed to declare to M. Guizot, = Austria that the Eien who have signed the treaty of London, wishing to ‘o remedy t the _false position - in _whic they ¢ are is nanveaies is a The Académie F; i ee i ¢ M. Victor and the Count St. Aulaire, tiabessetor at Vienna, mem- Hugo placed by measures to constrain her to give e to her policy a decisive eharacter either for peace or for war, in the hope pom this ill step w: to the reduction of the Fren 300,000 men, rok Bina to a general dsarmatmeat of urope. The m that Austria has remonstrated ae the fortification ot Paris is ried This plan a by engi ineer officers, | has | ern: con- ,000f. bers of the Academy, in place of M cier, and the uis de — “engin _, PortucaL.—Lisbon, an. 4, 2» age - ome last t year. e Sag were lta. pi ig an i sw re 52, aiviens ha an in oop The greatest the number ine 16, 16, whilst in 1839 t5. In ; and in Warwick there were 93, is looked ith great interest; many members of t Cortes, it is said, have to the determination that til Spain shall or considerably modify th an ey r as placing an interdiction ‘ee an inde- —, daiberation, it cannot be eget oye Bia The weyance of fin national ro, to be bonded jon, is sai of the meet with the ion, the landed gteatest opposition, agriculturists, and all concerned, looking = added to the present deficit in the budget F France, sais fail to embarrass her in her finances, and weak rt render her more redoubtable to other ponte Moreover, Austria, 1 herself at — point of her v mpire, cannot conceive it to be ust that France chon do the same ; and as the fort. fic ao of P 2 to stifle for ever the spirit of revolution: ” the absolute Powers pedis’ er. approve of thei. m. In reference to the demand of the Aer Powers as continued armaments, advices from Frankfort pote > that the answer -“ a ‘the French Cabinet is pacific. M. leased at this demand being ma ade in a WwW fd aT federation would have threatened the existence of the landed proprietors, fe Ministry of October 29. The Power are = es t the one especiall ae gr gem ope, Oat upon itas a ruin- | they Sexi be anon tiie shen aon ; guy Loved abeve cil thins lst the Chambon ease . JAN. 16.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 43 difficulties in voting the enormous sums _Tequired for state that a courier who left Cons stantinople t the 20th has vgn rince Metternich the news of the formal revocation by the ie = of the déchéance of Mehemet ee Prussta.—We that an order has ye P coed put all “the fortreston, i including — northern and eastern Gre at activity is a gop in the arrangements for the Coburg railroad, which is to connect Coburg, stnaianjiosment Mein Weimar, Erfurt, and Eisenart, and j railroad further north. Ki work will be begun in spring ; whi is i two days to th frontier oO he n e peer .of Sout n ANOVER L tters mm Pom the Crown Prince hi recovered from his indispost ; the Queen has presented to the P: vee the Bible, in which t ib names of Luther and Maladies are fever in their own handwriting. Englis ish lawyers a who, i with some patter of are making investigations to ascertain what part of the jewels = the E d by we — dl rae over is to bel ong t ig ct ero eae at these lamers are sent as commi ig gli oe government t 3 but it said to be more breed thet they are engaged m the part of the King to oc materials and the Aepadttlone of witnesses, ac ised the us “a of the English courts of justice, for the laste bs ma po i of Hanover intends to i nstitute against Que sup os by the | ende leavour to settle ‘this difficult is to the same letter, Austria and England had set their veto upon the French Levant steamers being allowed to touch at Messina, or any other ae of oom on their pass- age to and from ee —c ofoing tas ta a te ina hi natu conse Iti ape ian pristingés refuse to go. s mentioned that a n, and not to ha ated. ‘Damascus on the 8th. “The British “and Turkish of Austria (0 join the gieat hiheersng in their armament: sO as against a w: it sent for the evacuation of Syria in consequence of Com- 4 WN, >. ’ +} YW he ave been satistacto ory. bi jonas from Milan of the 27th ult. state that hs com pire og that city and Turin continue 0 be ex tremely active. The Austrian army quarter wed te & jo-Ven ciatk Te dom computed at 100,000 men, and would, it was expected be ie reinforced by 50,000 more. Milan was so with troops, that part of the artillery w ) enc i , which was filled with waggons laden claim to the thi continue to reside at Rome, with me ¢ title ee Majesty a nd Prinee Lge of his : o him b rte that the = is state spect of a European river. Eeyrt.—Accounts recently received Nile now wears the a: to be seen constan ntly taverns by four steam-boats veying mails and passengers. That of Mr. Galloway is ‘said to be the most rapid, having made the passage from Boulac to Rosetta in seventeen hours less time than the Pacha’s steamer. On the river are also th -boats with the Roman flag flying over them. ave on board the columns fro gypt, whi npr Ali has given to the ga “a with astonishment at e flags, which represent St. Peter and St. Paul at al lengthy mith flowin, oni! ~s ey are g beards, and ot = andar of t the r fevte , as the ewish. Since Mehemet ‘Ali lost the ‘command ey the deserts of ree Chriati has been received by the Pope istinction due to her Majesty.—The new Can — The Union. Eilon rr "Montréal state that though nothing certain is yet known ioe rding ; the inister of Prussia has had an wadbuiies w the Pope, dee lared again n that he attached great importance | to t io wilt ane te ¢ Hone. —The Kin ted th dat with the Pepe signed ig Teme, bat 1nd in suspense b the late king. It appoints two Dutch Roman Catholic bishops. He has also suppressed the office of secretary- general, the x having @ responsible signature, his Catholic subjects gave him m great f the ming yon e. mation of the difference with Prussia plier was expec’ ted SwitzERLANp, —The Jourtials mention that a French artist has lately made a drawing ofa a certain part of Mont Bla ne, which lend to be give: by the v fanethe 6 the peice will, pro- remarkable fsemblanee of the profile of Napoleon on his death h-bed. ,The sketch has omg lithographed, and innu- 1 Com bably, be hen ceforth, Instaed of 83 per cent., only 3 or a long time one of the summ its f War to the e army, giving lists of numerous c promotions, tending to reduce the expense foe Topiify the organisation. e€ commercial Petes! concluded be- Customs Union 1842, will pro- bably be renewed, be meg ith certain eae cations. Russta.—The ¢ Gasetle mentions that the Em- peror has Dehn a order of St. G on pera Snare and Co ommo odo ore Nap jer. in whi ich eorge, third ad The lette fi Stop ‘ord al to intimate to the sdopieies of Go. vernment offices ther, that ran will not be required after the s 4! ome and all the Government books and papers pied i ‘0 Montreal without delay. This would indents thet the Proclamation bree: per union of the vinces will be made sors Pe ment, at least during the first Parliament, owing; to a = mountain a borne the name of t r races eur. hi am snow way to "Greece, was yp tion for Be two ‘sh at Udine by the accumulation of sno ow. Ac- Legislatur ure ; ; and as the sam other portion of the province, with the a of To- ronto, : is concluded that ‘sre the Unirep Srares.—The Sheffield packet arri - onday, bringing the Presid ent’s cpio verpool (on ult., barked Mey a suite of nine persons, on board | the steamer 4% Athen Gre 1 Malt cr hey papers have lately adm nar —_ the second class of the order was couched Re the sng re herr :—* We, Nicholas I., &c., wishing e you a p roof 0 f our pete good-will, for ‘the e war- oF lata of a Athens Greek R4, is of considerable nes ow and In [sr throughout ‘o the great sided, it is hoped that a favourable period is “approaching for its final settlement. Both Governments must now ae zeal in favour of o have named you "oh ves of our ordet of the sa fle Te the Be ing of t this e head was foreed | between the feet, and kept th bound or hours said to be in use, gh Ad extort eeaiacont of imputed crimes. —The Goy ernment havi ving represented ,to Pion Darm wéleintity, Titer, which shakes “the “globe, from Jaxartes. he name of the Princess, after her re- baptism and ad- misssion into the fbn went ‘owe pe is ig a Alexandrowna. T hece: the glooms of and ope sd dee god Bay Tete b e fe pees lied tha 15,000 org (about Lage rend 23 ha of his is parpatiel cause of Fever should be eendiead as speedily . Int my last ae Message you were in- formed that the proposition fo: M, tion and survey promised b in had been re- ved, and that a proce ‘neloding also a provi- m for the certain and fin dju t f th considera on. The answ Tate 7 ent r of that Gov etnment, accom- ved was recei ia ied hal be cordingly been done. remony the jour de féte of the et Be. to aucti froagh ‘its Minister ‘here, since your separati on. mperor, on the 6 ay (1th) of. ‘Decémber Intelligence | Accounts from Roddats stile that he ik given up for gel were promptly considered ; such as were deemed correct is said to have Aba receiv: m Teflis Seat at English all ‘thoughts of regaining political power. He y put in principle, and consiste nt with a due regard to the just agents are exciting the Cicaetunet to fie essel a derv ish, w walks abou t the stree ts 0 iat ights of the Uni States and of the State of Maine, laden with am ition, Mi h was ema ith i y life mcurred in; and the reasons for dissenting from the at the ——— of the consul at Erz It is per that tes chid eri has declared tha’ A, due, with an additional suggestion on our part, com- lately in “ty ve and apical by the Rass “otis of ‘“Mehemet Ali being allowed to retain Beypt, th ese8 municated by the Secretary of State to Mr. Fox. ft — Wale from Pol and that the e new fortres f Dem scheriff of Gulhané reg be made besa throughou Mini ster, Rot feeling Ai mself 'Sufficiently instructed Rie lin and pachalic. Mustapha Pacha, Governor of C is against its western maiglbonts beyond the Vistula b fthati to refer the matter to his sy paced fa its completed, Porte. —Sir David Wilkie, bri has been at Constautivople farther decision. Having now bien m for some time w m advi of defence in Pol resze, rca eobilins Med lin, pi the ctadelot waruee. the Sultan, who has’ already A ger him two sittings. Bre The milita: ot4 Lares on the line again: stated to be 31,000 infantry, 4, “ag ievaliy. 36 5 iam gir and 24 ietacnon fey The force which Russia has beyond the Caucasus is still more considerable than = on this side, so that she a. suddenly send an i: mse — _ Asia. g has directed the Central Com- | — whethe bi rs oy inthe cree goa fogl diieke m, to "tak the fi id i a suddenly ordered | to Pen andicns venue for sid is made e up, it ch march. T' and will be speedily p ublished ; - an early con nclusion, I look with entire prs ted shortly after the pees of Co der the act of the Three commissioners wee appoin! g (255 The picture will, it is said, presented to Queen Victoria. — The vilieas has brought 300 rters in chains ; of the corps which escaped from their transports on their way to Syria, id made for the mountains at Rodosto. —A letter rom Marmorice Bay, 18th ult., quoted by the yes merce, stati £ when Commodore Napier sailed there, on his rei rom Meena, in the é Powerful, turn fro the crews of cht 6 other ships anchored in the bay saluted him with three che sap . The Heeates sailed with engineer officers to repair the fortificati —Letters from. Seri state that t the co ‘Shame the propo- shackles on ves ha feee roar of its nsorshi: Prepa year. The estates of Jutland have sitions of the royal commissioner to im: bea Press, and have de clare red themsel TT tricts, ow bi signed a hi not to listen b any proposal for the aceon ee New ‘Ham mp- aie fos the Bath provinces; they have been good — bg til their Lape ee was interrupted by the clemency o resume soon as Sf ee le in the ensui that aes respective exam the f ce i rs an election of the pro crucial states ites, and all are actively canvassing for their favourite eandi- It is stated that in the event of the liberal being — mphant, the king will see the necessity of con- vokin e Chambers of the Des. gdom, in spite of the partes Ivaty.—A letter from Gen oF the 31st ult. states that the dierees goer h hha? sk arisen oe Austria and Sardini: of the inten of the latter to remain “eh Trance ani former i the ret urn of the men wha have eret bry eee which have of Bulgari an villages, an taken | ent and it is said t ede “a. however, gained by the Servians | arms fn th nds, and cannot easi! them or g or aieok by other provinces which hav natural | There se mens fs as an sppreheasion that the | easels enjoyed by the Servians. | you have ss trance o Senda iaviting the young Prin se mater the cis tat te Lubitska, to Con- | Mishes! ‘ao har desire the Prince shall | | stantinople, Woods, b iy the eens of a friendly vee ioe eee ee ee returned by The speach fusthet power, in c ft Woody of Ghent. No answer has yet been | Government to the proposition.” 44 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [N° a. States, ing? the relations of the United States with ac ea “ Found dead, but by what means death h was caused there |P pressed forward. re vein in thes arm, yee the jugular, wee Powers of h is no evidence to prove.” uesday an inquest was | ope y them, but only one or two drops of blood they are bound by no entangling alliances, and are held on the body of a child mend on Waterloo. beige. It | flowed. Scott was then conveyed a: dily as ible from all interterenee with the domestic cand political rela- | appears that a gentleman w: over the bridge, Charing-cross hospital ; — though life appeared to tions of states ; t f the African | when his —- was Santee to a paper parcel lying on | be extinct, he was subjected to the vanic process, to i t, | the parapet outside = balustrades. He drew it ont on ee. vagy the shoulders, and lastly was placed in and ieee vessels of war have een sent ast of | the pavement, _and found a coarse towel, on removing h, but ve a The occurrence is attyj. ica, to prevent the traffic bei which which was found icsulaeit co: wth g on ag the ra- ican flag. The country is wets to be to contain the remains of a male child e ely disme e chin towards oa neck in suc ha a mann T as to pr pidly recovering from her late embarrassments, and the | bered. The he ad had been Fanasd i the a and the ps tion on Puesday, of Treasury, with fini =g for the cur , ani n divided above the | and evidence entered into in r egard to the particulars of rent year, are perce x tory. In regard to the | elbows. The trunk was -—" in Pi and the legs were | the accident. - Mr. Powell, surveyor of the Water Cabinet, it is said that Mr. Webster would be offered a separated from the iri r. Havers, surgeon, who ex- | bridge Company, attended to state that it was erly ip of State sits mission amined the child, on a the parts of the | without his knowled, — the scaffolding was erected, Mr. Clay would decline accepting office. body, \ which was iivided into eight, = erage Seay _ false statem made to ” he -keepers by te Texas anp Mexico.—An ac has been received, out three day man who that he had ob. which sta tes that ‘resus page tea having joi th tained authority So the pa ia committee. Consider. Feder to the hands f the, tively whethe fines born "The able discussion having taken place amongst the jury on Government troops, a £ Saltillo ; ax eas that it was pets by | evidently sag tched t bes peta extent Pra pe the company havi _ d the scaffolding to be Generals Montago, Arista, and others, th that they shoul | head had been detached hors the bod ay. which had been | erected, they retired, and uch discussion the tt with a knife, either before or immediately after erdict of * Fi: lag arepe bey received into the houses of the eteatts s, who, in cele- | death. he body oi not been sin es is anatomical pur- —On Saturday afternoon an =a s held bration of peace between the Centralists and Federalists, Verdict, “* Wilfal murder again: me person or | Gates, who was killed in the rui ig the late Royal Bx Ex. made the soldiers ti While in this state, they were | persons unknow: n.”—An i inquest has been held at Gre reen- | change. a the evidence it appeared that the by their generals to destroy pc oe ; but wich hild engaged on Frida e oskins, a widow. The surgeons sates say of the foundation, ~ had m ing | The battle tea nine hours, in which 400 Mexicans \ were killed, and only four of the of Mary Ann He they had examined the body, 7 came to ie nelus that the child w was born alive. The lungs an ree ae were Texans. with blood ; death was caused by haar es suffoca- nade some progress ror his piadtoe st nine o’clock, the whole work, when abou! gave way, nen vss man was buried underneath. Sev workmen from different parts of the ruins came to his out psi of ome territories. The isi oduced by pressure on er pies ug policeman | rescue, time elapsed before they attained their of moment has roar the my that, Repaiaavcuatey rmation he received, object, when the unfortunate man was fou rushed to tity of cotton imported from Texas into the jUB ted | he oms erdict, ‘‘ Accidental posi Pgs er accident me ld pes &: — Ibs., valued at 240,130 | th gravedigger stated that he had received:| has occurred at Royal Exchange, in consequence of temala. Our | the ras a hich Tavente to bury for Is. 6d. Jt was stated to | the work used gu powder for the removal of perm a 4 informs. pecrstnne was just tay Sp that the child had been * still born. Several wit- ruins. A l } which destroyed the ith listinction, when the proved that the child bad been net — The | windows of several adjacent d created m arrival of H.M.S. Comus the plan. fenediges and three stated alarm. The ma; asistate pried ithe ‘contractor to pay for ‘0 the consternation of the authorities, the Comus is re- | that th th damage, and censured the employment of gunpowder ported to be the forerunner of a s directed to noper Oat the jury would iy plat: $ to rs The non for such a purpose settle old claims and protect British interests. CITY. Exchange, Jan. 15.—The rap, p raomgenes fo Hise oe F Money and 90 bayers for oo Account. enced a fu ea at 167} to cons % per cent., being qu Bills continue at 8s. to ing improved about dat a to 2503. Exchequer ines. prem that th, ey the medical gentlemen, both of whom had te death of the child had been caused by violence, ‘Kher aise a verdict of ‘* Wilful Murd sonia against the mother. onday broke out eral al Vietualling- yard hs by burning.— —Two i inquests were held on Sa- turday, at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, a ve bodies of Edward Bennett, years, an stan ? | aged seven years. the case of se reach carne ey t deceased was left i a the care of two much older than himself, t out e lit a piece of ge at the ey with which he was _ playing, when his k ignited | % means flames ; but it was beyond all to It appears to have. Originated in ment of the works. Pe sdistely sf alarm was raised, an the engineering depart- the discovery the ex! tinguish bo wnt, and died two hours hay > from the mantel-piece, when her pinafore took py She ran into the Linge) and the — were quenched by one of the snow. in want of water. Sh 7 . . bar. big Nagata cushions on the seats, together with the matting on the floor, will be tic, pr repaired. The fittings { for the Bude light have been tas! iga g » and o e stad was a considerable time before uses damaged e mother stated t in consequence of 7 na pie, had occasion pa ut to fetch ag — er, when she left deceased wi rs old tefully pai the fire was pheshitso ol There are nine ho’ by the fire in Pleasant-row, which ich adjoins the works. Company f 40,0007. The loss ce since last session. ‘The | is estimated at 8,0002. ered, Accidents. — Singular Scott, Diver.— Monday afternoon a fatal accident occurr the man in the room, telling = 2 4 0 go isa the pegs On her return she found dec were extinguished, and was conveyed to the St. Giles’s infirmary, where she emnirek: The child was standing in front of the fire reaching some- thing off the mantel-piece, w when her clothes “tgs drawn by the draft towards the ite dict, ‘* Acci- apart corer tin box to hi Wanet THe 7 friends to make by. were | pending hin hs Inty tetntyed = wh er hit ewes born alive, ot bere ae rs it | dead-when found. ~~ es 7. Ue A ea nee al ae ere te j «Jan. 16] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 45 ; At kney, the thermometer at ten p.m. on Tuesday | to Mrs. Frost, and stated that they were exeetiy. fome Moor, by which four tae lost their lives, and two 4 was en ; on Wednesday, = seven A.M., 28°; and at = ld, when 7 36°, catia noon there w: ~ — of rain, which soo Three days prac the jury ret erdict, “ That the deceased were e afterwards to snow, re in many protest ed parts ae soc eg pecan notice that they wont _ _ | accidentally ee mi an ool ma of fire-damp.”” 3 settle yn it lasted for four ieee d when it t ceased _ Port Art vai ur, a eeren settlement, althongh it - fom © po pec Wheats.—The —— frosts 4 the mercury had fallen to 33°. I to have been intended as a Fa ~—— and heavy fall o} wee prove most beneficia to the i ry rogressed slowly, and throughout: Thursday morning the Frost Meal “Tam at a rt Arthur, a a place to which the | growing crops, s 4 ery f and where y may | pearature take Mae. 6 Oning. to the enremely mild 4 the coating of thick ice with which t they w bly its greatest extent. I was not, how- eee at — comme! of the year, the plant was 4 —— been acted on by the thaw saa being a ever, sent tn ct what is called punishment. The Go- ing exhibit a sapere to econo: which - 7 sl ict ry by melted snow. ae six ° pre -M. the ther- | vernor told us repeatedly that we were not sent to Port checked i va the — and fresh vigour we ; met er was (33°, with the ind rth-east. ears Arthur as a punishment, but to fill certain offices. Wil- —— unfavourable harvests which we have q t and one o’clock | liams is a superi rintende ent in the coal-mines ; Jones fills | a perienced ay st two o r three € years, the m ospect of ( a snow-storm ‘commenced The par was high, and situation at the bl and Bae in uekies pply r ng; con’ tin ued so dur ing the. elena Dhar snow covering | office , the Governor of P it h it i of course. ‘early yet t f several es. Inthe Parks, | Arthur. I am ree hoe asa clerk, and a hitherto the | fidence ak afew althou gh t — os covered by poring the ice was not | labour has not been heavy. Ia — I months ee hic seg both of which — rb veal al affected “i e thaw. On the River, on Thursda er- | never was better; and my spirits gta | promi ; noon, in consequence of the unmooring of a collier, a} ing all t things—much better than I could tg bois The Weather in the Country.—The Provincial papers 4 sheet of ice about 100 yards in — and e extendin ng anticipated.’’ state that the remar' able changes experienced in the i half. F Lancas ter —— the sessions the Hon. Capt. Plunkett | | metropolis have been generally felt throughout the king- H the fal and did a in its | was charg dom. In a letter from Bowness, Windermere, dated on | progress. A lighter la a with staves was dri gainst f the i turday, the writer says, ightful weather with if a tier of colliers on the south side of the river, and was | his duty. Defendant rg oe colle: Mr. Wilkins (for | which we were favoured towards the close of the past year 4 stove in, and the wood dispersed about the river. ‘A e defendant) urg p ly | hasat length given way toa bitter ‘storm of frost and snow, q schooner was forced by the a on the bed of ice, where | when defendant had come into court, and said, ‘ “If T have | with a high and. p gf ly wind. The snow lies : she stuck fast. sree rae after this the ice was fora short | wronged this man I am willing to make any compensa- | unusually deep on the ground, and on Thursday morning tion.’’ Since his release he has joined his regiment, by | the lake was nearly frozen over.—From Shrewsbury we but the ice was so thick | which he was received with more than ordinary respect. | learn thai t the frost ; has been very severe ; the Severn has pr they — not effect. eee ‘object, and when it again | He has sort his duties, and has himself been recently | began to move the vessel floated with it. A brig lying at | sitting on a court-martial to see that justice was done. | with sk: its surfa Ss pn off Wapping was the e next t obstacle, and the ‘Strain His ‘regiment has been ordered to the ben quan If the degree of, te perati peri d this season, the ther- on the cable was so great th proper to deal with him with rigour, h fc d Fah ezing. let go 13 or 14 fathoms of chain, whi i If the court will call u him A strong wind. from the south-east pre A away, and enabled the ice to pass it. “At London-bridge pay a — or to make compensation to the eae which was followed in the evening id a storm of snow the ice was divided by the piers of the will most readily submit to whatever the court may | On Monday, a still} fi hich, added t further mischief. Although the thaw — rain have in | think fit to impose. The chairman, after considerable de- | the slippery state of the roads, oned some oma some measure quantity of ice, there still | liberation, then called upon Capt. Plunkett, and said, ‘* The | in the arrival of the — = Halifax o on Sunday morn- remain vast fields of it in various of the river.— | sentence of this court is, that you be imprisoned in acl ing a strong wind from north-west brought with it a The frost and snow in the neighbourhood of London dale eee of Correction for two months.’’? The sen! heavy fall of snow, which. gen asite: during the whole have caused very serious distress among the lower orders. | is said to have € produced a considerable sensation am ssa of that day and Monday. On preapsiaidg there was a Many labourers of all classes, especially gardeners and | the bystanders. heavy fall in the neighbourhood of the . The conse- agriculturists generally, are out of LG apred and have to Kent.—The Hoo Union—Thei inquiry into the conduc t o retard combat the severity of the w eather oi from | of Mills, th travelling, a: the mail a: SRBC eae ay et ah the loss of wages, ae ee in the decisi f the m tes that the case should be pine kowtacul ettuesimmstions mek icenetbeetiartet etings for the rie of the ken t for trial at the ones assizes. Mr. Mills h with six horses. It is said that four years have elapsed the metropolis an yal parishes. in the | ordered to enter into his own recognizances in 50/., i great a fall of was experienced in this parish of Tottenham pian attention has been displayed | find two sureties of 25/. each, to appear and take his rie ; country in the same length of time. Accounts from in this caer emer pire of the inhabitants has Carli. L cary! writ Considerable various quarters describe the drifts as being of from been convened, at the uest of clergy and the excitement has been manifested a in Carlisle by the exami- three yards in depth, according to oe pte eee eg pis pe a to ee amount of 1811. stood charged with stealing | | ae Hull, on Wednesday a the snow bene, $0 have — iperigtes which have been si nce increased to five sovereigns and some va valuables with _which he fall ne: arly of le tte 2 fall +} pars be ner Seat about 700 families to a young woman of whom he was the Tore: It seems, bifant can ale the ae on Texel el ground b sack of coals each, upon the pt the money, but had f. e streets the early part of small payment of ls. ; id the ne of relief has a| answers, purporting ‘to come from the female, acknow- | the morning were almost impassable, and the outskirts discretionary power vested in it to give away such other | ledging the e receipt of it. Hetes beveeemersiet tes tite OS ke io remain so. pis to articles as may appear necessary. Ashton.—Investi are the rincipal Foe a carts have been con- Trades’ Union Combinations and p ae murders recently tineally poss rae peg it away, so that locomotion is Brobincial Netvs. committed in this neighbourhood, and it is now stated | p! Jt, Mgnns free. fro Bi Sess eae i eae : that the perpetrator (oF perpetrators) of Sie Beueles of ee ecay ere Benjamin Cooper has been discov Thirteen indivi- | i choly Joss, during a-violent snow-storm, of the steamer dmitted to bail, | ning Thames, on her voyage from Dublin to London, on the as in 100/., and two sureties of 50/. each. Four rocks of the Scilly Islands, and all on board, consi of | hin baak been n liberated on bail have been again scm 60°to 7 rsons, drowned, with the exception aie a gs into custody fal murder, and con- ady passenger, two ste es, man. is i examina the vessel was discovered by the islanders, their boats ap caf wes Plect, age a has st a reward aground, but with great efforts they succeeded in launch-| of 100/. ar the Roa gins of the murd of Garland “S a whale- boat t through the breakers, and getting ; her Yor, named J: Hallett, a labourer, and seven or ight om other persons, were regis from Tock to | which has pe the females being first hoisted therein, and unfortu- nately, Sages cna, ernie ge Fulford, last week. When they had proceeded as far as placed there, the boat broke adrift, and drove off the land. an | co. eae was perceived by a sailing-boat, which took her in ee on wie _ 1, Mears Sharp ath On ee tow, and succeeded, wi tha tee in wind leona elnost said, ‘* Stand back, poet ee oe brains out! ’’ at the | has ~~ in safety. _ By this time | ind i d almost m his i allett not a hurricane, ib doing peasigggo Peg n= 1 The oe a formed a head, surgeon ediatel a aes mn of the crew ot bigs k nea i ‘emples * Cf waeiins Semen y Poon peed are and all ao 8 3 examination has taken a matery grave, sputusseenpeome F one mani, before the magistrates. stated, that he who was ular rock, where he re- | first struck by the man, and that he fired in self-defence, mained. the following d y, when he was rescued. but the comrades of give a different version of essel became a complete the remainder of the | story. He also stated, that he i the wentced.._ It is stated by the surviving seaman, that | him because he had before been annoyed on the road. He weather being owt te rekon with showers of | was commi ork Castle, his trial Snow, t oning, mistaki es 1 Pe e St. Agnes’ (S Islands) light for that of the Long-| taken for his appearance. _ ; Ee oe \ eee the Col ibewidden rock. Northampton.— Bank Robbery.—Messrs. Whitworth | Manchester and Leeds 5 pede f th sl lowing circumstances. 7 (the young man who had robbed them of 800 in gold) and his brother, sent one of the : who traced them to Shooter’s-hill, i an hence to Bowes station. France ae fr aap | then pid 20/9 the captain | and toe weanes of Bact Sey. th to Boulogne. of | The officer proceeded no Soke ton ae his life, after he circumstance of ; rter being driven on shore, Cae Barres whi bived to beat out ; he dra ank a little, and sod salfened the to escape. a ee nm er the psioberhe ad had o y been married. ey stol.—On Mon aie + Clecctn meeting was held in| Social ’ Room, for purpose of hearing an address | officer from the son of Mr. Frost,—of agreeing to tition to | the ¢ Queen for a remission of the sentefice p x prisoners,—and also for making a subscription towards | p the Return fund. The principal interest of derived fr ; r. his 46 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. is tf Be Midland Counties Sullcur on mie, ae 8th. = ame merchandise train left Leices' nm hour and a half before ems Ag mail, and passed ay ica on station three quarters of an epee to | the mail. , When within a mile f Derby. line. hour me a quarter | et e train came to a ‘stand, pons the motion; an avin guards to retu onThey had just got back, and the train was gathering mech when p; and thou gh the red s ig? al would be > admitting that he was a political antagonist of He is mentioned as an instance of a man rising above dif- them by every means in his power. Dr. Higgins, the 117 .+} | pean om were then enro Hed as members of the Association, eek culties who had o ginally derived few adva antages from or cb tion. —Another fire has occurred, which was fortunately attended with, loss of life. It is zapowe after which the meeting separated.—The ordinary weekly of t the af rm meetin ng o Asso ociatio on Was held on Monda ay: ide of the fi kindl ghb yuickly on the oy but i wa ford was rome re nothing of P g d hg d that i f{M f the g i pe by ir. Attention was principal a magistrates of Dublin ites was me Ancor immediately directed to their rescue. x woman with a life duri ring the rebellion i in 1798 and 2 slipped 1803, d I Fitzgerald. | down the slates, and handed down by a tra - Two other bx commenced life as an officer i in the army, and se ved children mann in put- ; but ting the last child out of the window the “father lost his 1790, and subsequently became Town-Major of Dabl in. In 1808 the Duke of Wellington, epee how] rhage the > Maj very thick sep thee nth the sight of ad and the engine with “ mail and night carriages with into of the persons suspending the ladder, | fa shaking Res that the individual who had caught hold of the child let it go; but its life was happily preserved by one of the below catching it in his arms. The man received s SO severe min out in safety. A mother was an neat ts overa ah =5 which she main- violen to the merchandise train. of th ppointed f th f the h “Majo konpa engine-driver, and of the onse- | Sirr disch dadiea until 1826, ee quence; but although a first-class carriage, nearly | the odes was prkiormaricy with that of brigade-major, on full of passengers, was next ine, viden- | which oecasion he received an autograph letter from the tially none of them were hurt ; assistance being procured | Du uke of Yor ky in reference to that ‘pa art of his servi ices, erby, the mail proceeded, after a ’s de n e ri tal death, , on the engine.’’— Acollision took place on Sunday night between the Bir- | office on full” pay, with liberty to retain his house in the ‘taine d was in the house, but whic ch tha d been considered by on ‘the body of Mr. walk at which the Earl of Gost mingham rhe North Midland trains at Rugby, whilst the iter tt ashed to pieces, and three were so “seviuy injored that they ame ex- pected = surv

202. 5 & family. But as her sobre was easily discern a, they | that had been relied —— by the band of his regt., | expense to officer, p , &e.; total, 229/. 12s. ; and deducting ent no further than the rules of Pe mtain his remaii 1022. 7s. 6d, found on him, wh ag * handed to 4 lai 1. 4s, Gd. It was only ae essed one pottle. After the lady — immediatel y bef cely, however, had i basins, ft ast ane that defendant was not a z ustifie: nce: serious vidence having ncil was held, to deliberate on the Bed of "the re the | rst strokes of the mu ued drape is, and the fi i facts. Evidence b been mainder. The. dai ghte: r had now no objection to sell the: em notes ‘ot ee * Liat March’” es Saul, pte: by the band, given of te parment of the Caged ad fea Board aot po . i er 0: iy again ; a oth g psi es Fm me plant “for the fall amount, 1271, 4s. 6d. it more fi he interest to s ‘o her range the eolony, and who formed part o p Mayor’s Court.—Lockett v. the Bank of England,— which wa accordingly done, Ey this sod acti ay agence which rted the prisoner to the place of his | nis case came before the Court as a claim for bag tg wi ispute between him a wife, Madame locak execation, fell beck 1 to the igpid warty with fi . | the good-will and interest of Mr. Lockett i in the Cock Tavern, me good * and insisted on boast ee her friends with this er himself, 0 a the ante : paced athena ae gs Se nee oe Bank of E d. The Yarity; but the attorney knew better ure his im amounted to 1 sum of 18,9941. Sir W. Follett own ini to the Mar » bo t t was, “however, eehny at as he approached the spot stated that in this case ion of the Bank of eae ad promised to preeure him aque But where his are was already di aes Oe i fi oun - which | desired the pr of Mr. Lockett, w povalyand was fre. — the peas set down Ly the table, when the loy ereho his coffin was deposited, his countena y porting pig sce os gy! i The public, in required lowers came in, to visit the | pale. _ But the speetily rallied, resumed | the self-command this pad for public improyements ; but the Act determined that Marquis, and seeing this unin t to ae gee lads y thus he h i suffered | inall such cases nd individual should madhactaraatd ea gis as it were, fly in his face, he conce. tment, | his eyes es to be ba andaged, and submitted to his fate with Locke is Lop asa Goo of es Pat to we ity to pay a visi syle i ‘perfidi aire and resolution. When the firing party, which fates had cond ed claim would be the profit made by ress, who very one thanked him for his pe msisted of pag! toc commanded by a serjeant, was | Mr. Lockett as a ta poses gon be eaginaste 2d be able to pe prt they had a : =n flavour. called out, and the to fire. give gener are There woul beraps her carrying the matter s he then told her that she gs that he fell down piqee eal ea ones leet of pee ae must = till the —_ be tasted them, aes fainting fi 1 thies i in er to avoid ti the instance, he prove that to make ten gallons of soup it re- gave opinion of the goodness. The lady, fee! eelings of : mpoeaen which might, either at the mo- | quired six caives’ heads, ibs. of butter, and élhs of flour, The guess his meaning, and confounded at the si F his Recorder gree’ pas do you give itt son which i orm transp: He then related to | party, the men to bases lot it falls to form it are not al- an ave e Fears of 1837, 1838, 1839. that period her ge last meident ; but “she, not suspecting what had | lowed to load their own mus eg but these are handed to et 6 calves’ heads—(Loud A Bsa 3 happened, affirmed that they were not the same them indiscrim: at ¥, So} eing loaded with ball, and | give 10 —— 2g age estes: 2 balf-pi “3 brs ag ong This enraged him still more, and he required to ber with blank caridge. ak we 4 S 7619. 6s. (Roars of pln By ay There was also crs in which pe ies self had placed the pottles, and| 4m American Toast.—The following was given by Mr. | another way of making ‘mock turtle, and that was with scalps, adorn flowers. Not able to produce | bg of Yonkers, New we Nes 50s on a late occasion :— | and two s were equal to a head. er—Two acaips hi ox q to admit of no terms of 0- the state of New York— — + os ee 06308 ; : thet would bf are, ——— the peas again ! "rian eater ns wor Remag heer ened pear pti ears, heavy grass, | Gnce 245 gallons, or é (hihi oe Sly secret inclination for the lady (the t beauty | and no small potatoes,” exposing ‘he seurets Ay 4 net 438 a THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. —e [N° 3. (Laughter.). Giblet sonp would be the mext head. (A laugh.) | swore that the two water iag-pots returned by the plaintiff were Thirty sets of giblets would make ten gallons of ae tt berm sets | not worth picking up i road ; that of all the dahlia-seeds ad been purchased ; that would give = own by the plaintiff only one had ever bloomed ; and that he et Vid., 15054. 10s. 8d. (A laugh.) er Did ae ad heard the who was planting the lilacs and laurels say that nothing but giblets into your soup, Sir William? . Taugh.) his master Gapintit, ) knew they were more fit to burn than to Sir W. Follett—Yes, my bre ut en raphe, =" would ea at ‘d An witness ee that some of the Td., 27202. 13 . Soup bouilis the whole job.. One of them would h une it, and thought 50lbs. of brisket of beef made 10 gallons. Mr. Lockett had had | hi if well paid, for 407.; another would have poe! it for 50/.— 7141 of brisket ; ould make 1 ms, Or 31,1 Tiff s' p, and the jury, al ey pacpees basins, 14241. 2s. 8d. sonp followed. (Alaugh.) 84,128 me time, returned a verdict for the plaintiff for basins had been sold. (Laughtet.) That would produce, at 8d. | s z each, 29041. 5s. 4d. The total for p was 16,2531. 1)s. 4d. Lon Se . Burford, a baker in business in Long- (Roars of laughter.) He would now come to the dinners. These | lane, who sold under the snare — was ce a with we harged 1s, 10d. each, and the ani t 4666/..9s. There | fraudulently aaacheaae halfpe: ‘o the scale in which the bread w other dinn where y were supplied, which were | was placed, tins defrauding the public of halt-an. ounce upon each charged 2s. 10d.; a fowl, or S idered sufficient for | loaf. The Common Sergeant stated that Burford, who was a two persons; a » for four. Recorder—It used | wealthy tradesman, had coon veral times warned by the leet to besaid a se too not e! jury of his practices, and had given agp to the ~ and needy wi al fine of 10/. to the —- and be imprisoned in the House of Ton: e! the mock turtle. (A ay ed Two bottles were put in ten gal- | rection eer ne month, and that he be further imprisoned u until lons, and 177 dozen n thus consumed. e counsel said, | the fine he pai the gross profits — ~ found to amount to 4705/. 17s. lid. c P A number tradesmen were called to prove a supply of the lice. good things of this world. Thomson, the cook, said that in b Moo 7 a times they sold 500 basins of sou bei aber N Ho — Rie who was pepe ago pos a » charge of omen Seed notes and post-bills, caraeGes to be the issue of country banks, at the gaming-house of then! ony Leicester-square, and also at the gaming-house of Strar b mination. PSs rs years w randy, 29: french and ee wines, 14,659 ; but from this was to be Fah the amount oe stock on | Played agai st the bank until his losses amounted to 525/,, which the 4th of Dec. 1840, eae e average annu: st appeared to he p id in country - Subsequently the prisoner went to 7201, The porter and ale supplied to the house was 7s. a day, or | C00k’s house, and 2 of money, which he paid with 199, 4s.a year. On e 3782/, 4s. expended for wine, he esti- oma notes. Thompson went next day to the city, and applied mated the profit at 3959/. 17s.—Recorder : 3959/. 17s.!| That is | 2¢ the bankin, ‘house where th peared to be payable, a little more than 100/. per cent. (Loud laughter.)—Mr. Adams: | 24 discovered that they were forgeri Heimmediately stated It is, my d. The fit on rter is 71 per cent. A pipe the circumstances under herent oe nad ceived the notes, and of wine would cost, with the duty, 847. He supposed it to be showed a disposi t tance for the feat a te of kept in bottle three years. The interest of the outlay, corks, the prisoner. yr Cook, the other gam! bling-house &e ‘ould make the cost 108/. 7s.—Sir W. Follett: How man keeper, sent his wife to other meres ouses on aiecion a the glass are m ma bottle at the bar?—Mr. Adams: Four- | 5@™¢ kind, a similar account to that rendered by Thompson teen, at 6d. a glass, pr ing 7s. (A laugh.)—Recorder: The having been gi abt utertained on the subject by both ust be ve or the glasses very small. (Laughter.) the officer, who, with the assistance of those parties, succeeded —Mr. Ad : ton wine sold by the glass was 121 per | ™ apprehending the prisoner. Daniel Forrester said t at he ook, lig ttt i Agreectsaniicat. Weck cheniioed. ail te found bay prisoner, and told him he was charged with forgery. tradesmen’s books. He found in the three years that 4655/. 3s. Prisoner said that the notes were not forged, but fictitious. Wit- was paid to the butchers ; poultry, 781/. 2s. 2d.; the fishmonger, | 7°58 found in prisoner’s pocket tter addressed —— Johnson, 3251. 13s, Od.; bakers, 727/. 7s. 3d; hams, 116i. 14s.; sauces, Esq., 7, Leicester-square, enclasing three bills on stamps to the 36/. 5s.; butter and cheese, 347/. 5s.; green-grocery, 504/.; soda- amount of 525/., the sum he had lost to Mr. Thompson, whose “water, 302,; stout, 592.; and 172 dozen of wine for the mock- | Tame appeared to x sir! e been mistaken, and 6/. in money. The turtle soup, 3017. 3s. 8d., making atotal of 7s71/. He found ne te pai ad aes meee cad gertn the er ae seat le | > b ;, pa Sagal ge ad been supplied, which would make 166,240 should b id apan’a little spitnleaevee: a Inthe coach, polation tr aay patoPagtiag for somp boul to2al. 2s, ae ‘sd.3 Esq., stated that his address was “ astle-grove, county RoR dy ag OU 17s. 5d. 43,366 Ibs. of meat h: Louth.” Mr. Bacon, engraver, stated that he engraved exten- paces nn is : or fonsu ad sively for country banks. as notes were en from plates i lowin: pound each pers inner, his possessi: which, like @. 1S engraved for country banks, yy = =o “ never were 0! out of his He had seen several notes in For- of oe powest a fowl or flags pace been supplied in three igeons ; and a pigeon dine fou poultry id wished to alter } ae os oteaiy weegen ly thus oo 2 Obst. 43 Bats as steaks were put in the pi from twenty to. were © sent. The was such that ink pies, th only c¢: to serve three. e would run upon it, and ek —eece ba .¢ a signature in i -, 2 Yoo pte cent., would be 6512. 7s.6d. The soda-water | the ‘ition in which ij Oo the bankers. A charged 6d., but cost 2jd.. The profit on quart bottles of clever pri d been re a with pcoerea to all the pra agi in Fhe er had three The net profit per annum would be 4005/. 17s. 11d. 377, ns of soup have and precision. He said tha been m: in the three years, numely—Mock-turtle, 166,240, specimens were never to any but banking-houses, and in and fi scalps, 3920; giblet, 32,848 ; ~ tall, 59,360; bouilli, most instances they were returned. There never was any appre 31,072; and gravy, rere basins; god o was allowed | bension entertain’ that they would or c be’ converted to for waste, eating — 30,372 Dasin: (A Tonga 3 5 @ purpos ed to him that th Mr. pod looper: os ct iets +: reduction of damages, and ob- he great body presented desired that ample justice shoul be ee to the daarant, but he wished it to be ¢ that these improvements would put no money i obtained. The m es of i their onan id they pe aid be improvem for the public benefit. | 2¥ity were greatly on the increase, and ded the prisoner. They w be as railway or d irectors, who Queen-Square.— Destitution.—The m trate stated that he hada potter oak ‘noe, tiay had done it for the public good, | had received a note, of which the folio’ is a copy :—“ To the and no one who walked im the neighbourhood of the Bank but | Ho oulins justice at the Pollis Court, Queen-sqr.—‘I would fecl how much these improvements were requi t the Libe 4 of. writeing these fou lines before your Wurtchip — LP egrervs the damage as foll —Lease, 1500/.; fix- | en stateng: cong eur possible distre: We’re a poor man and x aaore, good-will, and ali er damage, 50007. ooman, with five chilther and hi elf out of e ply. Plase if Tot a, 5000.2 3 beiog 12 .0002. less than the claim. yer honn: d be ind es to send shum buddy to shee arter Si iu BatFFS” Count — Puller cm Mace Shin efendant, J.Cur- their disthress bekaise they are nat fit to e before a gintleman. mberwell, late for Si h rand Mary Com ourt, Dacks La fuse his premises ; but finding on inquiry that there bility of the po Ww" Pi any fi wil ‘dians, ad baer to him for celief at the warkote, and on id turned round and, in an ‘insolen' go to the magistrates sac if pee id ge t eal Gregorie directed fi as he appeared Mr. Gfegorie ong “Have ee been to ae workhouse this morning “Yes, S replied © Mc, Gregorie— mc Eaee crags sod ad : mess extended, you have proved yourself ae bes Your object in going to the workhouse ‘a: desire mae only te impdse upon, but 10 i authorities there ; and I do hope that, if the ladies and gentlemen who have honoured me to-day with their Sarneeaee x come acquainted with your conduct ‘eros gh that o ve d down on his k excuse ; tate ‘T thoneent it visit by sa thease ” -orie—You could not, ee ee tem —— Peart. ing, i oO ne her whenever yo joney. M NE. r young men ught before the me trate on the following charge :—An Inspector stated,.that he aw the prisoners in ane ba tre of Grove-street, amden-town, n his han at one end Be time was quite true. The magi: eee: 9 pone d — Sane: about for ing alm Ich w: uch the se titiges “tt gainst the» law Ban ma not ote atiSered They srere locked up, and direc- tions a that they ry oty ted bizah by the officers of the Men- dicity iety, in rtain Saeatiee they are re nown TATTERSALL’S.—Tuur With reference to ie members present the ‘petting i in the after- colt was backed at 15 to ' i va aes a not. t : noon was tolerably brisk. The Ros alie Whistle opened at 25 tol, a was backed freely. It appears, : indeed, that he is now the best favourite in Scott’s stable, 22to1 having been bid against Mars! » without eliciting an , ‘oes asonen: en Peccrge quotations ust the ew horse: : of the afternoon :— vets ; ERBY ‘ 15 to wetpondicion Winices 50 to 1— compres 16 to 1— Palemon (tea = 22 to 1 — Marshal Soul 1000 to 15 Bah re: Star) 25 to I —Kniglt "of . the | 2000 to 25 — Negus (tak ca J . Whistle (taken) © | 5000 to 50 — Ben Brace (tak en) 2 30 to 1 — Pce.Caradoc(off.) — to 19 — Van Ambdralitt) 40 to 1 — Duke of i 000 to Hd — Mustapha (taken) ton (taken) 2000.to 10 — Arcot Lass ¢. (ta.) GAZETTES OF THE W DECLARATION OF INSOLVENCY. e Woo p, of Atkinson- places] ae Surrey, corn and coal dealer: : BANKRUPTCY ANNULLED.—7. M‘Doxnutu, 3 Pall-mall, - St. riewes! Ss, Westminster, boot andshoe-maker. BANKRUPTCIES SUPERSEDED.—S. Smita and S. Sarri, Manchester, engravers.—G. Lewis and J. Baost, ‘Thorpe-le- Soken, Essex, carpenters.—T. J. BAray, Mortimer-stt., Mi iddle- of Berkhamstead St. Peter, brnsh- . MANSHIP MILLS, 0: x . Rawpoen, now or a aof Reo make ICHOLSON, Manchester, neo Bua Stokesley, Yorkshire, flax- spinner.—A. Bro R. Brown, of Li 5 ep, a = T. ca: of Live manufacturer —R. N, © owner and seal “engine butter. — of Glouces ster, Lape 8. ROGERS, J. WA of Barrell of Newport, Wanaakuahire, grocer.—. Well House, Boughton, Chester, silvers é SHALE, the youn; a - - pape BD umber, Liucolnshire, linen-drapet-— J. Fea , Yorkshire, woolstapler.—T. PAYNB, Bidmyart, Herefordshire, wctuaier— Sa AN, Seymour-place, Camden-town, Middles weller.— bet » Hol A Yorkshire, groce Birmingham, .—J. STEVENSON, adybum, — G. GILLESPIE of Ghagaw: ee a bn merchant.—J. Scortaxp, bee Kin cardia ipowrner.—-JOHN re of Dundee, wig- maker LBERT Buatir, of Gettybeg-mill, near a wool- merc’ 4 t Fitzroy Hoase, Southampton, the Esq., of — — of @ ife: er io Thomas Bloo! R Silvanus, 2d son of G. Snowden, Esq., of Ramsgate, ase of the late Hugh Sandford Harriso: on, Esq-; House. ; p.—Oa the 14th instant, at Howard Lodge _ el f wens eines George infant son of Wm. igor Boas Tayl ‘or, ag At Brighton, on the 13t th in: rs. Everitt, relict o — late ee path Nicols, Esq., nghani- f me ., the beloved wife of D. T,. Pidgeon, of Un ce, Cama own, aged 50.—Om the 13th instant, at the resi leoee of her her Camberwell Green, Mrs. Sarah Chilmaid, in the s5th pd rae ~—— the 1 i t,-in Upper H arte street, - gl.ter of Charlies an, A Printed by Musas. Rrappuay and Evans, Lom ro ect tree in the Seep ne ice ae in the City of LOR don, and Published hem at ‘the oe ARLES-STREST a Cc a patna, ix tan Coty O00 where all ABE : tad Commnications are tbe sed tothe Eat Saturday, January 16, 1841. on Dae THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. A STAMPED NEWSPAPER OF RURAL ECONOMY AND GENERAL NEWS. THE HORTICULTURAL PART EDITED BY PROFESSOR LINDLEY. No. 4. _____ SATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 1841. Price 6d. "PROSPECTUS OF HENCHMAN begs to infornl Cultivators of the | CARNATIONS: FICOTERS ToL Cee Nos: AURICULAS, > x ‘ s nfo’ 3 ‘ - en E Ba fe RD E NERS CHRONIC bes - Jes rtsease, that he a now supply, from —_ Sosive of | H GROOM, Walworth, near London, b sO k oint- ‘Seat is fine Seedlings a bin pay geen ich wi ment Florist to Her Majesty, begs to Ne Blo. 5 lt Profess: ey. cncecssfl — Se at marten Also 5 good n med variets cs for | the attention of the s Nobility, Gentry, and ublic his extensive iene is admitted | to be better ter understoodin Great Br pee exhibitio —Edm: n, tek n. collections of the above Flowers, which he a Rimes COteehy, eect the se a ee ee > Senpere | Modexate peices. He has also a good stock of Lith ts ‘i hie onal the patronage it receives, and the desire there is Cut ENDON aie ERY, ISLAND of JERSEY. punctatum and album. Catalo; noe Ss can ex of Lita sncitol foam to extend the knowledge of its various branches. Many thou- ENE et wr ea begs particularly to call the attention ee cation. sand persons are engaged in the business of Horticulture asa == ar Growers to his unrivalled colle of Pears, especial means of existence, and a vast number more are interested in the pean Leon eeetere wakhpe Be ii " aeneity acknowledged ‘i subject, for gardens are now an indispensable part of the domes- a be the best in cultivation. — —Apply as above, or to Mr. Witort, W TOODLANDS N URSERY, MARESFIELD, near tic establishment of every person who can afford the expense., po Middl rees 5s. and 7s. 6d. each. Letters, post- VersIELD, pcb and at PARIS No one will, therefore, doubt the advantage —— may be de- with fefetones: will be promptly ‘attended to. Also his List, Wr mM Woo p Son respectfully in vite the attention of rived from the est ment of a Jonrnal condui in ap honest dn wats Eng and 800 Names, may be had on applica- = Nobility, Gentry, ptcerliry and the Floricultural Public in and liberal spirit of good-will to all, who - engaged ee tion by letter, po: ger nei r unrivalled and boundless stock of Roses; and in ee - a arog and who will thus havea Coe Sa ER STENTS aye egg eS ORE) hav ue ord y large importation from the Continent, cheap means of in mmunici 0 n professional subjects. ‘TOHN ak bye atk ERYMAN, BLANDFORD, they are fally palin to execute any commands with which The one vroposed to be followed e Be peer a of THe begs to ce to wers of Dahlias, that he intends hey ar be fa’ Pate GarpENERs’ CH LE, is in RST PLACE to make ita | sending out in May next, Plante of his beautiful SEEDLING and Son beg leave to offer Roses as under, warranted weekly eecieth of posiosine date that ens upon Ho sicciines or | DAHLIA, Amy Robsart.—Colour, blush white edged with purple, | ai Ppenntital Wetch varieties, = to their ceo Vgc Garden Botany, and to introduce such Natural History as has a | very high centre, throws itself well out of the foliage, a decided N.B. Plants added to the er GRatrs to compensate for relation to Gardening, together with Notices and Criticisms of | improvement on Dod’s Mary, and a perfect show flower. It has Carriage and Packing every work of importance on the subject which may appear. | been approved and ordered by several exter ers com- Now ape od deliv ery, asunder. Per doz Per 100. Connected with this part of the plan will bea WEEKLY CALEN- | petent judges.—Plants 10s. 6d. each. Fin ‘d Ros £0 ll0or# — DAR OF GARDENING OPERATIONS, givenin great detail, and a Giit’s ee e of all the leading Dahlias may be had o Half poronwe ao Por ny ta 5 0 so adapted to the varying seasons as to form a constant assist- plication res healthy Stock of tower Boag Foreat Trees in Fine Half Standard aps 5 a 600 ance to the memory—Foreign and Domestic Correspondence heb sing of trae hae Orders w ill receive the most prompt Extra Fine Half Standard do. ts 710 0 upon Horticultural subjects—Reports of Horticultural pe rakie att n.—Blandford, ] Dec. 1, 18. Dwarf Roses aay ee 110 0 and Proceedings—Notices of Novelties ; in short, wide eae al Fine Dwarf do. . . . ae a 210 0 can tend to advance the profession and benefit the c on of rae. Mw - MILFORD whan NEW ROWFAT PEA.— Very Fine dwarf aa Sc eokts 315 0 the workman, or which may conduce to the pleasure of nie em- ea grows to the Pee of about four feet, is Extra Fine do. 0 18 5 00 ployer. Thus the GArpeNner, the Forester, the Runa Arcui- very I Smcy cay great bearer; boils a Ligr-eeoe en colour, nes ay oar Noivette Roses , 6s. : 2 : > 4 TecT, the DratNer, the Ruap-MAkKER, and the CorracEr, willall aah is pe Tg moat’ to Knight’s Marrow in flavo! , and well cal- do. very fine have the improvements in their respective pursuits recorded. culated Hed - secondary crop. It is now ready ie be sent out by Ros oe nciers and Amateurs are sell invited to erty ae “wen. GARDENING is in many respects the art of creating an Arti- | WM. You of the Milford Nursery, near Godalming, Surrey, Wood and a for their Catalogue of Roses, containing all the PIciAL CuIMATE, similar to that in which — are naturally | at 2s. per ‘quart, or 15s. per peck. varieties worthy of n — which may be pe — ra he pcr found: evidence, oreres regarding the real nature of climate, W. Y. has grown the above for the last three years, and thus tion to Mt Nursery y in London of Messrs. Nixon as concerns vegetation, is greatly wanted. om it a fair aa be He —g a alo oan itto de ea ae = —o Portland street. ates qumniiketa, ait teres! topi gentlemen ’ e leading sorts o: an S, 2 shiek siete toe Soman ae netae ate soon bp of | and have Kindly attached Red severe need an : reof, v offered at very Hiherel pe wa ster pe —<- of the the various parts of the creation each on the other, will also form Highly a yR 9 asee ie sg oe ee beter who can be supplied with a Wholesale Catalogue on ap- . See eae Feutaice will be the introduction of informa- Pervieskabiy zood ae Gnevitir, Es Esq., Mil iford. y : a eaniion tion to their enormous supply of Roses, W. W. and Son tion relating to FORESTING, or ARBORICULTURE. This is one Highly shores = — Gro. eyo Esq.» econo a would wish to solicit the rg or of their friends to their splen- of the most important subjects to which the attention of the pub- Ditto ditto J. ery oi 3 ing’ es st mee did collection of Gerani ‘amellias, other Greenhouse lie can be directed ; for it is often little understood by those who arkably fine-flavoure aor dina tae Maine ei Plants and Climbers; also Americ ican, Evergreen, and —_ cee pad have occasion to practise it, althongh the amount of property NB. B.—W. Y. has come bey dispose of some fine non Shrubs, Forest uit-trees, shee rg a fen corre “sore “08 ze affected by the management of timber stands second only to that | Potatoes, at 4s. per el. lorist’s Flowers, and every artic * ine, wane Eire be epegeicenig en yey gig ee CUCUMBERS. pape ob iin ob Soya, yen pa ber and regulate its growth, the value of i e extent to whic’ r 4 S fe it is influenced by soil, and consequently to what circumstances Ee Spor ameegd pla A ms ee 9, In order to make room for an entire new and very a are to be ascribed the great inferiority in quality of the same spe- SION-HOUSE ST. eg to inform their fri plantation of Roses, W. W. and Son have found it necessary to cies grown in different places, are all points to which attention sen thet public by they ners “Seeds of the following Cuc amie clear several extensive quarters of large ornamental trees, con- will os given. We shall endeavour to collect information upon | Teady for — D. Backs ces — of large well- dine Chest, 0 of — oe that very important but much-neglected subject, the d: es of Man sale sag te . . = 5 3 ed | oe s, Flo steering. 3 Horse Chesnu ag Be _— gad Cutemmee _ ‘trees, and the cause of their decay, whether natural or acciden- Wot ed 4 . . . . a { lms, Maples, in great r, 7s : pr tal, as well as to convey the earliest notices of the introduction of ing rer ae spine . . Pc a a | Moved with perfect adi, A ar wou e foun ¥ new species, which promise te pe ey oa wing og auty or value pnp — tan ta Se | tageous to any gentleman about to plant | Bab phccteoneg oor filly bana green gaan Farmer Allen's Suffolk Her 13.0 [HE GREAT CHATSWORTH CONSERVA- attired ic he mca ALENDAR, oe outn Si ae er Kitchen- — and Flower cats, comprising the new and | TORY.—One of the most important features in the \ ei chad Ganpe ers ONS ved variet j | of this magnificent Conservatory, isthe entirely new cc Although it is not ‘Tatended to occupy our columns with the | PPro Ginny, edapind tenes is novsitpena Meaney Of &p- wraiee ote eee © paren nt of | (\UTHILL’S MELON, and SNOW’S appa yea pearance are acknowledged; and having now undergone most aoe te * Snail Wtasigaes gue ve is tab td comet ra BE .- CUTHILL begs to inform Melon-growers that the | satisfactorily all the various trials to which every alteration clude the general p! i n oO! planfs, whether upon a ora i asmallscale, Whatever, ee above has. "proved to be the earliest and most xe heaters it of season and bee on can subject it, its vee tyes par xe i ‘arme hi ened for four years from the 5th to the 10th of May, and | riment may be regarded ‘as complete. It has establishe: gre fore, may be found = n that respect to the F: = ae medals from the Jeading societies round London ; agood | superiority to every ot! rn method now in use, regards be constantly reported. 3 . Ps = inten To the FLORIST our Miscellany will hav: ue much interest, not | flavour, scarlet flesh, very prolific, eons mh of gece oo rope ao pea — of ap it, a ro only because everything relating to tho and beautiful pro- Also Snow’s Horticul ty Prize bes : i, - . ao oe ; — se eee ae a ice vepand Seger pen son gicg amrstentn Siar ae be constant treated of heen hen Wy mahtreae of Oar donde la gudek Mentens, rison unrivalled in the qualities necessary for the retention of “ = a manner as to m im thoroughly acquainted with | been $ * merits or de er of ae -rarieties, and with thon beat modes | flavour,.a high bloom, length 16 to = epee foe aren = a = sap ae - Tights age roe oo zt aed oi a = 0 because we shall take care that such | sent out before. Packets of the Mel est nee ‘ eae f mens 3 eo Glazing ea yer bese Ge eeaae Son by sompetin judges wallatasiptpercane eet | ou the Forcng of Mcionn wil We sent onthe RGGge of 26 62, | JOSEPH DEAKE: © Sermpe crocs ara an 16 by e jud, 6 1 interest on ; 3 . , ' a i mpeten pone a 4 fodne that deus tion of | each. Address to J. Cuthill, Florist and Horticulturist, Love Edgeware-road, a: e.t i tl of t nih eos 4 i P Walk, D k Hill, Camberwell, near London.—A money order | worth Glazing was intrusted, is honoured by his Grace domestic and political News which i Usually found in » weekly Serial by incl it label, will be be Devoushire’s eotire aprotetiie of the manner in tern it has paper. We consider it unnecessary to dwell on this head further = Camberwell Post-office ; and by inclosing a pos en completed; which approbation his Grace has been pleased than to say, that we do not intend to range ourselves under the ent free. = signify by a most gratifying testimonial; and in so olicitin i the banners of any party; on the contrary, our best endeavours wi OT-WATER APPARATUS FOR HEATING | attention of such Noblemen, Gentlemen, and Horticulturist ge- be to make THE Garpeners’ Curonicue a full and comprehen- H RAL BUILDINGS, DWELLING- HOUSES, | nerally, as may contemplate the erection of any building for hor- Sive Record of Facts only—a Newspaper in the true sense of the Ses, and SEAR SUFACTORIES, v m improved pi ticultural DEFDOSEE to the Glass and Mode of ages 3 which have word—leaving the reader to form his own conclusion and opi- | CHURCHES, an h eer b DANIEL on been so successfully cmplires at abe has the kind ions ; our object being the elucidation and discussion of the | ciples, and at very moderate charges, erec ¥ issi ment jaws of nature, not of man, = reader will thus be provided, in | EDWARD BAILEY, 272, HOLBORN. ey fin r Paxton - der ne ee ae laa rt marae seri Pern he senders raarans apts ptm toto cigs inno ore Syston perience he pry ents th. him ‘or € Conservatory w that in such cases may be re- pei kes sam aren geben events Sotho day as. will supersede | tion of this subject, Ganed paipenai tures, by tong uired; and J. Draxe begs respectfully to add, that he shail at oe en wee bees eins casipesten sgrementoned rendered their mode of heat. | all times be happy to furnish Lists of Prices of the Glass, orany a Lope at are happy to anscurice eth at they have already neue pony y very efficient, but very simple, and have combined | other particulars which it may be deemed desirable to obtain, Aejinhaaedaeveerastsatcs meeormaner Se Ee anes ot ber tus with my in the charge. The: = ete by letter, addressed to 8, Jermyn-street, St. friends and su seh whom the fol! dnrability ia ~ the apparatus with economy ‘y particularly supporters: ano prone erung nny ben have erected apparatus England, Scotland, and Ireland, for Prof ; a ee ee ee ee ce eae pa = SHEET GLASS for HORTICULTURAL PURPOSES. i resmeerGenen, bane |sr'wea. ae Glan fon net mployed by the Horticultural Society of London, in exécuting OBLEMEN, GENTLEMEN, and HO) HOR EIUGi« 4 Professor Royle, of King’s Fhtes e | The Hon. — VW. the works of their splendid Conservatory, lately erected at Chis. 3 George Barker, Esq., Brieniaghen Dean of M. wick, from the designs of Alfred Ainger, URISTS generally, are respectfully _-G. Hentham, Bsqy Secre etary of the | John Rogérs, En ei tract in metal all descriptions of ate furnished with — of Prices, and every every particular re- 3 Horticultural Society N. B. Ward, Esq “D.and E. Bartey also co mn BI pay the above article, which has been adopted so suecess- 3 = ee le, Edinbu | Mr. Paxton, Gardener to the Duke of | Horticultural Buildings and Sashes, “hog by shoe = — La fully at Chatswo orth joan application to 4 DEARE Per iee yoga ae _ ‘TBeatord Mr_ M'lntosh, Gardener to the Duke roreme tae! wai sicher: wees’ they have the opportunity of Crown wn Glass mt * house, 8, Jermyn-street, St. Ji ames’s, and 100, gare Gardener to the Deve cr | a ee to the Duke of | €Xhibiting, amongst other metal cone i mi wang rag = Ges small or large quantities of —~ emg Pi item lof Norfolk. | | Portland and convenient kitchen apparatu, or range, ee Go ska cole, | Scumiat wechtabety Gok tote required s ire and panctually Mr. Woolley Sones te the ae Mr. Seapine url to the Mar- | tinued supply of ee ig and an arms re the public, | cuted upon the lowest Scaalenste treme. —o er, 7 Seco e | quess of Westminster more complete than has hitherto on rought befo m pune en Raine: . Myr: Cooper, Gallas Ueewiliam. ee eenet © the: Duke of |" 1p ee Waey were the first to introduce metallic curvili- | Putty, Prepared atta etn oi panier nme Gardener to the Earl | Mr. Frost. Gardener to th near houses to horticulturists, and can refer to the mers sabe UPERB SCARLET GERANI alge ue ey to ee a ee aoe attached to the Pantheo: oem “ ose of their works, besides many WAY, Florist, eedsman, Se.,the Cherry Orchard, O) " asi Mr. Buchan, Garieocrts Eee = Want, Gardener r ae Earl others in this country and on the Cofitinent. ton Road, late Contenene Somenity ta pb oe venerat a , Gar 0 Lord v a —— RT 5 mon (Egerton, te toc Law, Fartenct to Lord Carlisi HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY ampere a er Soa and respectfully solicits a | -Me. Errington, Gardener to Sir P. | Mr. Booth, Gardener to Siz C. Lemo H a has com : having of late years paid much at- Mr. Baxter, of the Botanic Garden at | Mr: ‘Gres, Gardener = WEEKS & Co., ARCHITECTS, _ Praga ee pera soponsm ony General Fuvourite, “the Scarlet | Mr. Campbell Mr. trun ti. Vike Botanic ‘Garden CESTER PLACE, a ct CHELS: raniam,’? with the view to bring it, in a state of the highest s at Meares. u pul se Builders and Hot-Wi Apparatus Seawimetiinaia dil perfection, more intogenerainotice. P. C.is happy to say he has ee opiny eae metas | ee Garten: uuator of the Regent's leave to invite ite the attenti oor ‘ne Nobility, Gentry, and Horti-) <) ceeded beyond his most sanguine expectations; his exhibition Nee [eg te Roni urea ME Sti tat Gardenas | carat to inspect ter premises, wher may be seen 8 ve | oft giant the Morsultrat Soci. Garden, Chiewice, im iver } f ‘over - 4 i - st D Mr. Williamson, of the Botanic Gar. | Ms. Smith, of the Botanic Garden at ety of orticnleural soe, Gintad tage po ys ther Ho rticultural area ee Gardens on that occasion, and for ao the Soci - wen at Sheffield a! : se : i c. — ne to make this plan! Mr. Beaten, Gard Sir W. Mid- | Mr. Appleby, erections always kept ready made. i awarded him a Medal. P. jetons Bart. ee pita ie tema meet scoala To Hot- Water Apparatus, which is kept in action, is upon his principal study, and has taken much pains to cae be —_ =: ora bof cs Mr, fenzies, of Hope oe near | the most simple and economical construction. ———— peautifal variety both for pce aor wedi out.—N. Bs a feels aighbarh a Se secant 3 had = their eon oe — permis i 9 sd plants = aon true Shrub! and Scarlet ee 3s aera 5 306 Amateurs, Nurserymen, Gardeners, and ob: T persons i in- Carnes Peano > mits "9 ‘Enights: ae cake; WAN D, to fit up a Small Green mips ie aes terested ay *Horticul incase pursuits, are inv ted an favour the | yr, Catleugh’s Nursery, Chelsea; of E. scot ‘Esq., Clewer aio including First-class Geraniums, omg ae jo aban Borah aggre wil ith communications upon subjects of Lodge, Edmund Antrobus, and at their | Orchidex, Dendrobia, Azaleas, Camellias, as, Creepers, c. &e. the ity, and. nter — 3 Ci Ghousesteer-place, "Ghelsea, neat — full particulars (by letter), stating species, quantity, and. Coven ent-Garden. More ip His oetanel af oak Newsies amacec ee Horticultural "Mamuiactory, ss est Cash price, to aseoees, ay Surveyors, 239, ee 50 A Second Edition, in cloth, price 10s, 6d., of iB ig etary ages" = NATURAL waste SIOLOGY, MENT. WAR. BEVAN, Me D. Dedicated by permission to the Queen, and illustrated with numerous — uts. nee Voorst, 1, Patern: eae on the Ist of eee next, here By Me Ge Stiuts, FES +, Gardener to the Baroness de Roths- noticed. Price to Non- Gaon 10s. Applications for insertion inthe List, made as above (post paid), will be attend Just as and may be had of all Bookse! CATALOGUE OF FERN ‘S, after the peor ment and stp cag ee hatha with Peseta from Presl, nd R cepsicamaa he dpe Authors by whom Species hare been deserined. &e. &c. By J. firey. Price 1 W. Pamplin, 55, Frith-street, and 9, jie street, Soho-sqnare. To be published shortly, price Five Shil! ribigrn taht fic TREATISE ON THE GROWTH Natural Principles, in beds fractions and of the most aeonoes mical kind, wherein way not usually adopted —upon Trellises— throughout every period of the year—in Pots and tos he Sto fi NCAN, Au- = a co of the Melon,” &c. , Gar dener to Thomas Danie 1, ix Shillings, with numerous Woodcu HE LADIES’ COMPANION TO THE ‘PLOWER with ens directions for their Eutte: Lon ee by William Smith, 113, Fleet-street Fru gs ch, Fraser and Crawford; Du blin, Currie INTOSH’ s ew and Improved a G Te AL ENER, and MODERN HORTICULTURIST, Bae one vol Pca price 14. 15 exhibiting the latest and most n, = = and Flower Gardens, gpg Con > &ei, a. every month in ee anyon na anoriian, By Gnae Ma InTosH, Gardener to the 7 of the Belgians at Clare- sar at Dalkeith labour and experience of a life devoted to the bo Horticulture,” will be found the most useful piso only to the Amateur, but also to the operative a ever published. ——— as Kelly ; Simpkin, Marshall, and Co.; and all Booka pHe “GARDENER’S “MAGAZI INE, Second Series, boards, with 690 Engravings, above 100 pod iniss te hn wee ok the ge, may y be had of all Booksellers, o er’s é ”” First Series, in 10 vols., is out of print ; but there are a few odd Volumes and odd goog in ue them. rs.applied for can The most convenient mode wih pee te be for appli- to-state what volumes or numbers of the First Series they y possess Nurserymen or Practical Gardeners may have the above, or “* Arboretam Britannicum,” A ragga rece wagicl “ Ency- lepiedi of Cottage, Farm, and Villa Architecture and Furni- ber sl — bs Repton’ ‘8 ene sed Gardening,” plain or coloured, ——- rade price, by applying direct to the Conductor, at Bays- In one small volume, price 15s. paxrows POCKET BOTANICAL By cle lpi In what may be called an age of Cyclopedias, when the pression of a great pa bo of Benois i a into one volume, "4 order to bring it within the m of persons of all ranks, is bag universally sought, it is pot desirable that the caress and rive connected with his profession, should be as ool ac. commodated as other classes in Pthis - No such work existing, however, prior to the — of the present yrwepetcerd its value = at ; Siztce it apap ote leo essen featu a scan — ss pen anda Teebn if st of this comprehensive ane ly odageek for the Amateur and Floriculturist; w! = Teasonab) [vantage — can spar 5 bo sufficiently estimated by those gh a have felt an assistant ; and to all such in agrvinar ys Ps minh secteseiell of h oe the Pocket Bota- Bond-street ; Orr & Co., Paternoster-row. DON LIBRARY.—At a Meeting of the Commit- of the London Library, held at 57, Pall Mall, on Saturday the sate of ‘ om presi Capper, Esq. Au ts i w. por Bt.; —Mes: Thomas Richardson, Esq. Chr. Richardson, 4 ., Cornhill. rs. Sw wain, Stevens, a nd Co B may D. Thomson, M.D., 20, Gower-st., amt! Sq. GER. oo = A. Willows, E.1.C. Ser ” 88 —Ed we rd Ri ley, + Bag hae es Ma ia ee The e guaral nti ee of an ample subscribed ‘capit tal. Unusuaily favourable rates, calculated with reference to Aus- tralasian investments. Participation in F ponite at e end of every five yea All the customary Sortios of accommodation *agrord ed by as that if error sin the awards of the j dges should occur, in con- sequence of mistakes the t of exhibitors in entering _ cending and prem —e vr: Scales; optional retention of one- third bjects they may bring to the m: Society cannot un- | of premiu' — lic ‘0 proceed without extra charge to other dertake to rectify such errors afterwards. co! mbes 8 e.: case an exhibitor shall receive a first neg ta in any one wn chews nees ‘in India assured on toderate te ter er not be entitled to receive any other mi the aed ntl of £100, lette Age. hie Premium pees I,—Subjects for Bip pa , earn en aod Ps ve Persons 20 | | { { oe {as 4 Ue exhibit independently of each other; sepa being ; ne ga RES “Ciee offered for the ! or ye ‘urserymen, and for the o 2 es nics 3 ra Stace ste 4 6 6}418 nahn ven - Specimens of Annuities recei =— for ghd #100 invested. e| dle clmaiug |—Age- | 20 1 30 4 | bo | : SE\SE/BS/SEl\Ee | Male 611 6| 6166 a1 5 10 16 3115 08 ce a Female | 6 36/6 94 HE 4] 9.901132 z 2 Z a Curistorner Cousins, Accountant. i Company’s Office, 126, Bishopsgate- aig Lendon. A. Azaleas, greenhouse, in varieti | ite a number aayvigonen ty? 12 pants -| — | st} 2d} sd | — MIN EDGINGTON, MARQUEE B. ions, not exceeding 30 blooms; — | — | — | Ist} ad UFACTURER to the Horticultural Society, % C. Pinks, not exceeding 30 blooms —|—}—118| 24 | pUKE-STREET, SOUTHWARK, foot of London Bridge. D. Piecotees, not ex 30 blooms .| — | — | — | Ist) ad The Nobility and Gentry are respectfully informed, that BED E. Heaths, Cape kinds, in collections of JAMIN EDGINGTON has on SALE, for the ensuing Season, 30 speci Wee Geo st} —| 2d} 34] — | extensive STOCK of MARQUEES and TENTS, admirably adapted F. Heaths, Cape kinds, in collections of for Horticult) d Floricnitural Societies, Archery Meeting® G species . — | Ist} 2d} 34} — | Cricket Clubs, Public Dinners, Fetes, and Fancy Fairs, a5 a G. Exotic Orchidaceze, in collections of nally resist wet, are le, easily erected and removedy not fewer than 6 os Ist} — | 2d) 3d} — | and may be had of any dimen: ~. A great variety of margeet H. oe Tents, and Rick-Cleths, with s, &c., complete, New Se 3 species . — | Ist) 2d — | Second-hand, for Sale or Hire. SNettin ng and Buntin for Pre I, Exotic Orchidacez, dingle spe specimens r es ; Archangel srg Tulip Covers, San Blinds. ‘ke. Tei ee of new and handsome — | —| Ist | 2d) 3d | for Emi ts. ty ew Zealand and the Colonics. hang K. Exotic Orchidacer, single spe — | — | Ist} 2d] 3d | Banners, either S untin, i oo every variety. Room = L. Pelargoni fa callestoes of 6 é var K rated with Flags for Public Dinners, Balis, &c. Orders Sa rieties, and pponen i2toa ek -| — | Ist] 24} Sd] 4th | aadressed 2, Duke-st., Southwark. A Warehouse at 208, Pi M. ne iums, im i eee oe eties, in pots of at ol ioe aes Ist 0 GENTLEMEN AND AMATEUR FLO RISTS. as not fewer > , N. Rhododendrons, in rag age fal pea a T° E PARTED WITH, a FEW HUNDRED lst | 2d | 3d | 4th ROOTS of that choice and at lower the P. ese or incolecions collec: Ke CULUS, at 42s. per h with Nam) - — ‘Sur- tions of from 50 to 60 DLs ~- fp ee] sa] | — Lips Peete ap neuen to fuse my , heae’s sual |» Stove or ht ad ew 2 cage oy 1940 © Lavi- a. aera nema et cane] — ||| St] — | SRS ata irre yeoe at a ‘ Seedling Ge a ge 40s, each, pre’ : ene of aifrent spent zee ig | 3a pe bo 8 ad 1th Fe ba next and. which, fa gave Calceolarias, aaah Uimget eo, i : abi jas, in sixes . — |} —/ ist} adj 3d | somuch JAN. 23.] -THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. EE ———————eEeEeE—E—eEEOEee RT eee SOCIETY bai LONDON. a HE GAR y, that the THREE EXHIBITIONS at ciet 7 "s by erin ail rn year take place on the following —May ! meh Rboweed 12, and July 10. The printed Re- gulations ready fo for delivery upon application at this Office 21, + Jan. whe S41. Tie miele paneaie SATURDAY, JANUARY 23, 1841. MEETINGS IN_THE ENSUING WEE “4 Monday — eC Se ae En ining a jt 8 = M Royal I a ae 8 P.M Tuesday -..-..--- Zoologi ee = py Psa a we —_ upon Cottage Gardens in a late rizes; and as this Society has | natural form. By way of manuring, some cultivator: managed their cottagers’ een par aennien pe atoe 25 we print the rules, for the guidance of others. The Cottagers’ Prizes arein money, and of the value of 2s 5s., and 7s. 6d.: they are as follows: Br ahes MAY show, for the Pe best pots of Heartsease ; the best bunch of Wall-flowers; ¢ unch of Sto s the t bi ck: ea o best harmony ar the best t basket of Weantabloss Ak tthe JU LY show, for ‘he i the best bunc! six best p Aan of Hollyhocks ; t h of three Picotees ; best Ni ay of various flowers; the pound of Currants; the best pound of ‘ies; the fifty best French Beans; the best basket of | age es.—At the SEPT: ER show, for the les which, the ioliowing extra Prizes are offered by the President : For the best Nosegay, a Hoe and Rake ; for the best as vi a a ottage ee oe that the best sg laws followed oa aise: of encouraging the labourer in the cultivatio of his gar rden, wherever the system sgh been adopted y the subject much sooner than w intended. A versa ndent signing himself “A Member of the North Riding of beer me! Horticultural iat Floricultu- ral Soi writes t y has been p Se in this neighbour ood for a series of — by th e I belong, aided a their ciety to ble eal, ih tale of “Tyron ~ — ces at mnually, an i + winter, 10s. ; a Bs bade second, 5s. and Creepers, od agaleas co ampere e for prizes “se 10/. a- year) aie oe receiving paro: re S aaeeet to exhibit, present to the Secretary acertificate jy his basin the small i stem and into ¢! 8 prunings, leaves, &c., are put and dug in llowing the simple syst oe ture above detailed, the Kentish and S growers rarely fail in obtaining abundant crops of superior fruit, oat bn far, and much more undant, than se produce of those trees t niet vee to nature. yer hended 'to charge poner to cee no eo My quiring this valuable aidition to the dessert.—R, Se sor tc cee OF SEEDS BY THE EAST gg f cqaue Our the import- readers d with ance of ‘plants | not to pacsiors te fally the advantages of diff usion. If any doubt this importance, th only to | consider the uses of Lager to m or clo ey have man, as affording him food icines, or rey eat geen manufac- res; or they may calculate th es paid by | the farmer or gardener from the scgetahle: georet ts of the soil, i that which is levied at our Custom Houses on the pot anufactured products of the vegetable kingdom oat evry one is psc that of staies diffused t hout the world, a great majority. are* throug _pecul to different places, also that the inhabitants tn’ different countries have from very ea been it f the society, or by cers of the parish where such resides, Any infri he disposal of the mittee adds another 5/., divided the co Both ttage labourers’ peaoien at the September meeting in each year; and it is gratifying to see the stimulus thus given en to that class of competitors. _ The prizes are strict] Cay cottager stone ent of the rule that the articles exhibited shall be oe produce ary the cottager’s own garden, to disqualify the party from again ranean By oe the fro ht of the society.—The rule above of bring- ing a ot recei parochial relief to be strictly saute vitedar second — ag efforts ble pi rodu ctions, w €. onions, carrots, turnij in many instances, /I may almost say generally, their hum- | hich ar Ps, pota- Sane 3 and a view to this | . as shall in ‘eset whey — the = ef e aan Gardens,’’ notices of the work that should b plants as neighbours. The result has been a complete orgs. in the appearance and culture of many cou puntries : so uch $0; indeed, that re A as for foreign commerce, are not the plan inally natives of the country, those which hive re introduced from other and often distant parts of the wo d. Li mits can hardly be set to the successful intro- t prin aciple es are attended att; to. ee ae ae consist in also lar pam saan a pleasing effect ‘upon. the com- pany, and is equally gratifying to themselves. _ heir only of f those into which paar are to be jp oneal In ety ; each prize has the society’s car rd placed upon name and residence of the jeanne owner, i inning the prize, together as care’ muc! rn be the Seaeibeadl result Pa upon by other so iat i if a produce the ee effects.”’ 7. THE MANAGEMENT OF ; THE _FILBERT. | retaini y the étoipte The subject wil be commenced next week, which is as his can be ina state to | clim: q attend not only to the 5 es ae uire attention. In the mean while we re neta our | but also Oe on and —o pe air. We must, readers to turn to a short in another column, If | Moreover, observe not only emipeeature | > have i tal: of our undertaking given a ticular months of the year, but also = har ia ache grt : cp heat, as well as the greatest of cold, to which prominent place so humble a theme, it is because ials will be subjected. The tem ture, are convinced that one of the most useful applications of | jowever,*or that of the season of tion, may suffice pach is to thei improv ovement of the social and moral uals. Of soil, it is ss: only the chemical constitu- condition of the labouring classes. i oticed, but also its physical which require to si mor that is, its greater or poy nsi vb ped of absorbing . hd te) he s or less wa fond of cracking nu ts a Duke of fee gen intel prince for the purpose of rewarding those who culti Hed their ae ia teak sich ‘the past ried of sapere was excited rg was highly jonas hibition there were het best collectio: tions of vegetables, fruits, ad oT ar Re ee ee ee ee ee ee ee after ‘dinner, that the cultivation of so exposure fiiteatiderst atte ces to pone half-a-dozen times, with i hi British nuts is so generally rate and, though gardens, shrubberies, greenhouses, 0 simple, so little under: sto wgie by i and | Europe with t variety of useful ai mera entirely overlooked by ers on Lge enc | plants, many of seem as much at home as in their — of fine filberts in yo husk is orna- | native sites, in uence of the successive introduction mental in ti e dessert, and much less 4 wnwholesome, than | of plants for a series of 5 The know, whic) i d it-trees from Armenia and them a bright ‘outside appeara ce, have been half roasted, our tone. sually y given ree 2 grt — rhe rier of cul- mite. _ The Duke of Buokingtom personally distributed unsuccessful candidates a small to try The show of n. cauliflowers, potatoe: les, celery, cabbages, cau onions, enrote, Bronte parsneps, garden an ys 98 were much improved after an visit or two of the judges. For example, a widow had attached to her oe ad a tds spac a yes g such system em of 9 over-eropping the pry: no ies to be by: Tn regard to the pli ghar ligt of the nuts, "Biiod te to gather who piece of ground which for some years had been tacle fe rubbish, having had it suggested to her that it might be better occupied, has now an excellent c crop of useful vege- tables upon it. ; The foll . 7 3 = which the exhibition at E Stowe: w: His Grace the Duke of ef Buckingham a omy soars in- tention of rewarding the ie eet acineteges of his : aoa Cottagers at the following prizes,— -kept and cultivated for the ceceasiis rid ideo i wane FS ea a OTS RT ee eT nT ae a 3d Prize. ath Prize €1 10s. 6d. #1 Os. od, ene common Vegetables, Frui ey to be es 3 ~ 3d Prize. eis poe , Stating that e are grown in the fe garden belo ngin ee ri exhitite gore Pein pooper when peach nged for insp will be all nj and wi so be marked with the ; Me Vi vivo hae Ser favoured us with a copy of the regula- mark or letter of the tie iedividusl iho eatin owns which preset Stentor of the j who will therefore with the numbers, pam ns under which the Neath and Swansea Society have Saibaiiest Mana best m quite dry and stow them away in large earthen vessels, sprinkling a little salt them throughout the whole — Se ee es husks m getting moaldy and pone then be turned bottom upwards on ge oe ES ite De or kept Py ap! some other means : jars with lids might oy al ete Get bor thir es tee ac in this Bs and nifold ad to d from the introduction into this — of useful and orna- mental plants from congenial The object of remarks is to cl the aoe of aa ee ae tage, but also this country 52 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [N° 4, { . i tually be of considerable ——— to the country. | Pyrastri, &c., he B, . “they sometimes appear in| amongst which the seeds had dropped. Rhododen endrons pra of these I shall refer to in a future communication, | myriads on the suet all a ss ceed with me perfectly in the Peas aa soil, in which as I fear I have already too pe of your space. | not even avoiding objects = a thei — = es y and the Arbor Vite are the only things th ‘ mc! though it may | probably on their pa to t Saat gro of Kent to = = vigorously.—The fact I have now stated suggests q to many that India, be a hot country, has | clear them of the destructive Mphides ak the agency | mode ot which abundance of plants may be es from ttle to receive from, or to give to, temperate climates, | of their larve.—Ruricola. ae Is, SO that varieties may be obtained of this fine ever. ae i i hey of In sons of cultivation, in one of which COTTAGE GARDE bat fh wehok chad ked by hares or rabbits, and oe ae pees pa Sage Gece grains are cultivated, and in the No. I.. —Ovr prin rincipal object in the aos notices which | aa finest possible cover for game, as it grows well un ther Whea' pang and such acct ~ cago as | we intend to give in this journal is, to point out to cot-| the shade of trees, in a and in dry places, and almost are forced in our gardens in summer. The mountains,-| tagers and farm-labourers the way in which thei — any soil suits sf saeey atitude of this place is —_ ws i which oatrape over so large an extent e aay towiaey, or small allotment of land ought to be colixaint: and at | and I have no d ike ; have —_ agenes, | of climate, and at certain elevations, | th time t ind them of many little things whi h farther north, pi at much higher elevations here than I a —— is analo ogous to that of European should be attended to, if they would obtain, in return- for | have yet tried.—G. S. bigest Coul, 2d Dec. 1840, * “Of vhich tho: Wheat Mi idges.—In No. 1 of the Gardeners’ Chronic! soukieg ‘proof bach rte alayan plants which essential accompaniments of “the cottage are “ capal able of you have given a notice oe a lecture which Ww were exposed in the Pigg os = 'sa730 to a cold of from sharers This oe of our paper may be therefore by me before the Members of the 43 to 12° escaped with li injury, w! many Society, for the purpose of illustrating a report of others which sataralised a in our shusttheeien Wi the hago of Wheat, and which has just appeared jj perished and wagers —Indophil: coef as penile. No one doubts, the pores of a| No.5 of their Journal. In epenntgon the Wheat-Midge, y Pr me to more sanguine than J ENTOMOLOGY. att: really am, of the pesca of. piste this corn- No. I. ee Hawx-Fox.—Iatimately connected as neha) duces sober, siuucires sat domestic habits pest. But though I should consider any attempt at its insects are with plan ortega ad they are to some, but | creates that feeling of independence which is the best s€- | extermination perfectly chimerical, I d i i injurious to a far umber, pedi i upon their a = Ee pauperism. Nothing, ado, is so well ravages ewe be very materially check tion, i y . ed. Being pro- and economy ani unacceptable to t of the practical "retails of agriculture,— readers. Whether we ramble amongst the heather, beat the | e struc d that my suggestion ht — or scald the chaff w fi and hedges, wade thro the mazes of the wood, | their cottages a poset y= we ey a man gr the ak key to me eet with m voca tes. I was not vat all saunter along the plantations, or lounge in our garden, we Was SO pes tudy of t! a cottager by the state in which we find his spree — understand it to be as food : bes rete I have n now been sundl works. of the Creatoc.” Whilst 1 lave been | con- lishment. If, 0 n looking into his garden |p t at th Wheat, and I find templating these subjects under the charming shade of a / ’ that the pupze of f the Midge are driven forward with the spreading Beec d d the thistl noxious we she haf fi fall b by an object suspended as re before my ike a | cw annee catte mpoverish the oul we nie only to enter t the a space of about three yards. —Finding, also, that the chaff hawk poised in the air, but with pa less Sicsioes b aes ; | dwelling to encounter poverty, misery, filth, and disease. | is always sifted before it is given to the horses, and that sometimes it rises, then it falls, in an instant it vanishes, Tf, on the other hand, we find the garden blooming and it ocenrmal but before you can move it has resumed its station. This | carefully kept, we shall ean ariably find comfort, _health, to me » that if a wire-gauze sieve were psn ee the is a fly which I will presently describe, sufficiently well, I and happiness within the cottage. P to enab! i differen themselves, le the curious to follow up my very t from one of = present day. | ch d then roll from i oe pup would perhaps some more favoured student The contrast is striking to the commonest observer, and af cay “and wight Py Lesa with the dust i ina “ie t y help out of a difficulty, for with all my | our own observations convince us that the ee on Paced below the sieve. t thi ruminating I never could discover what these flies were | has taken prt area is not ‘sds for the better, but that th ctl about. If there were a pair of them, the secret would be pra hve s of vere together at an fot sloping wike the t; butif had i ing’s walk, they ing to be appreciated by the octet | rete eee - the chaff readily fell off on each side are all — ha are thus enjoying themselves. Dencivi This important result i pi in os oe in to the floor, whilst dust and secgeeks ehrough. If : But to return, this fly ed Scar Ribesi is clothed agreat measure to be ascribed to of the | si his kind for: in appendage with phys rea like et he has tw which oni sprung | every winnowing machine in the pacarend what erin : his head, they do not meet above in the females d nd which, by | myriads of the p pup might be collected and destr — . horny ello oO the phere Pavey = prizes as the pce of merit, hi ve : stuck on the forehead, each having a bristle; his | been th ie efficient instruments bree to a hi s : low bob behi ing e poorer classes of the by dl thia minute insect is ah pices than Senate community. at all aware of. I Jauch wish that some of your cor- and There is, h +1 ‘2 fg 7 £, ta an responde nts enaineee cal tion. The gard ef, , | the history of this littl g: we regret to say, in some counties in even a worse con- | the habits of the ich desti i keep finch tinge on the thicker nervures; when lying flat on his dition than those of their poorer neighbours. Whilst the Ihave thrown out (in my report) upon the os toy Be wed Eee pects ios | maaan to the latter have already | subject, which it b ie:to verte bey: nd the tail ; di so smash improvement it is 1 most extraordinary or disprove ; but Lalso fi a that there are ma’ ay nchanged. = base of the thighs black : he is larger than a a house-fly. that chaff, and whether rsome of them think it i f this fi y dens of those to wh tager ought to look for are ichneumonized, as well as pr gsel which quit the ears, phemerg y ge ag plant-louse or Aphis, and an example. We arc if our great landed proy Pp which I would this is the principal reason for my calling your attention | bad their nd would use | also” beg to call the attention of "ea ee may be dis- to it; if not, he is a near neighbour of one which is cele- | their nro with their penn we should Sngos find posed to co-opetate in these investigations. In the mean his prowess in that way. Sceva of treosiedy. for the garden ttached be Sede | farm-house and as time i hope 5 shall Bag twes some persons to provide such is his name, may be termed the “ Aphis des estroye! i S. Henslow, Hitcham, it is much larger going sp r Jar form, with a brighter green trunk, the in SR lobe es would strongly urge upon all landlords that no cot- am gratissima,—In your eee number I observe dull ochreous ; on the back of the bod 1 irs of or others, creme Beatles rticle by ‘‘ Hortulan culture of the withont « certain } quantity of land being attached t Luculia gratissima ; i as thers are many’ people who erected without ey might be inclined to grow this most delightful and much- ieietyt being 1 ‘reserved for the use of the laboure: t planting it out Ahi ina a conservatory, I send you an account of the method, a 58 F id be i i ae z ale alte a 3 pete He i fre de i a aT: 4 by i . ; ‘ . 5 ; s au ing ti uld be allotted to them ‘withow! Pandy We aoe that i in many of the rural districts of yee to be particularly observed, is that 4t is not inclined England, the best results have followed the adoption of 0 grow ly, and oe Bows be stimulated, in the | the garden and allotment s » and it is to be hoped spring and early aces! that period it should | that all who have it in their power will assist in carryifig be kept in a greenhouse bag Saget of May and the out so good a work. Much might be done in this way the gardeners of the nobility and gentry if they were | rather sheltered from the sun. _ In August or September ful vegetabl to distribute th g 1 hothous It will then grow vigorously and fora inted with laces w is m fargo age Anata art of the winter. It may isting the cottager a and we we sioeseaty p pe emcee s doe hope tht others eter induced by this notice to follow ps d ld tk i ple. the cultivation of a garden, we | —G. F. fa tear nae 2 Management of Birch in Woods.—It may not, be be because they are not only valuable in a pecuniary Lepentot of he nei but will thus set ygon is uch trouble or expense. MM. E. H. | My plan of managing it is this :—I allow it to roe Pe enn ae eg age of three or four be capri a part: ° HOME CORRESPONDENCE. (be Be ee feo oe t| Self-sown Rhododendrons.—Not recollecting to h ighb send take off all the : | heard or read of the growing from seeds pace agent Sap aah nothing from the =~ dropped from the tree in any part of Britain, and having | wood until a certain day, by which time their work is =~ inkco in scinloge phaita freak sade, et Pe omeaplaced: ———- of the being all tied up boxes placed in a warm temperature, it occurs to me | in a circumference. On the day a | that you may be pleased to learn that in this north pointe t Swipe of bundles, climate I have gathered selfsown plants. A day or two al which they then — me. In three years after ci c was removing an Arbor Vite, near to men ina similar been growing for about ten the growers sree left, and in fact take off oe by him, when he called my atten- before >—~ a number of plants which were growing under its i thus have my woods well pruned, and generally realise ete and which proved to be Rhododendron Seedlings | a great profit from he brush. I am principally induced from one to perhaps six years old, which till the Arbor | to make this (poem gener ged many foresters hate Vite was remov ed were i invisible. _ This proves, first, that | an idea that Birch, if pruned in the above age) and nex oe that shade | would is not the case. Old growers f the plants. The soil | et ae but young ones scarcely at all—-4 peat hens by moss of dwarf growth | Young Forester, Kidderminister, Jan, lith, 194 yan: ae THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 53 b thi k | of an inch wide, down each side of the square ; when dry, | —— the summer months increases the evil tenfold, bod is + dene, but “of course it is in win er.] s will be fo und to fix the glass securely. I have ] prac- | exposing the young roots, the very = tin to s of Tar a Manure fer "nak: —Most prac- pat the plan extensively, and hav ve found i it answer in all | scorching rays of the ae sun. How aan J cases, either for In the month | shrub’ rders ern until they wife dee four waka only in old garden-soils, but in many cases in those | of October 1838, T thus “glazed a ‘Hetchra, thirty feet | or five inches lower than the Yonge —— which divide which have been for r years in an roma nea wih long, fourteen feet wide, ten feet oo in re: centre, with | them from the ee Thus ideas o nm the out a span roof, and upright sashes I have never | subject ‘‘ jump,” but y di ron and are, T believe, confined to the soil, "situation, T think, had a broken square in it from fro: st ee that time to eve rot, borders at all > When fea leaves fall off trees, and this; and what is remarkable, ae bead “pane I have | cover the ground at their feet, why not let them remain > Chu nk s h ans : a very a yet effectual remedy, lately pian for heatin git is one ‘* whic rs the there to encourage their growth, instead of having them to by Mr. Duncan, of the firm of Duncan ‘and Flo- | purpose of bins accor keeping oat ‘the frost. Whi vile 7 am | dug in, thus cutting and mutilating the roots? We all prise p Edinburgh. pon Mr. | writing, th ip oheuane: ef is i pha open air 7° Fahr., and | know Med the — i aes of a plant are generally Dunean’s estate n ne Laswale, carrots were been found | in this house the mean tempera re is 38°. The metho 2 nearest the surfac shrubberies, in my gegen should for years to fail. gg ae year: o, he prepared a piece of ll be so thick and dense 4 in foliage as entirely er the ground, by manuring and di ae over in October in the andes he house hin “more secure from drip, if pein: and this is easily ed, by oof este of Mt rig anner, to one-half of which he applied spirits of —_ seinted. than the old a of penied tt appar mmon Laurel, Box, Holly, or Rhododendron. _ tar, at the rate of about one on to every sixty or | sides ofthe squares. It produces a great saving of reaped deciduous and ornamental trees, flowering shrubs, and poche’ square yards. The result was, that upon the rata so | and plang and is much neater pene more secure than evergreens, may be so disposed overhead, - to Pr epared, an | excellent crop of clean, well-formed roo old method. In nine cases out of ten, where ms is giv ve the true ME roe esque’? effect, as was shown which was not so pre, mately was | troublesome, it ari at ey emont, while se the as usual a complete —— This last ern, by way of | wood-work nd letting in the water, which ultimately rots pcm oa oe Me, Me Into and on a ase er scale at e prepared the und in | the putty and wood, and finds it the Earl of Stair’s, rea Castle, N. this the usual manner, but Mid not apply che porta of tar William May, Hope Nursery, Leeming Lane, Ripon, | mode eeping shrubberies were towed, all leaves, The er reg was, a total failure over the whole piece. January 7, 1841. cuttings, or prunings, of which there { quan- Thi s that the Qld Decayed Fruit Trees—In the Gardeners’ Chro- | tities every season, would be left on Pasig seal “to fc and that they nicle I observe some experiments by Dr. Ingram on a decay gradually,” and become vegetable mould, yielding are canta efficacious when applied. Mr. Duncan’s hollow ——— Plum-tree. I have frequently met |.grateful nourishment to the young roots of the parent mode of using the ase of tars simple ond excellent. He | with such in ees, expecially. where at some previous | plant. Where there is sufficient to work upon, I have 1 f fine sand, which he saturates wit ed down, branches | never found difficulty in forming vistas, recesses, on the s un Sis co mpletly mixed ; this he scatters had been pd wl a ot Dr. 5 itoring that cata- | effective openings among the eens with the knife, upon the rr sscaitciaily o digging, in about the ig cure ; but I have found it useful | but great difficulty and labour with the spade, where a gare grunt above. S ae gh pet about one quai to fill th with pure. sand, shrubbery has been thinly planted, long ill-treated, and ws na _ y; the —_ : shall ei of dry sand ep Ag! pow thee quicklime, with a view to starved. The effect of such. Shrubberi ies as I have thus bai n com sar bs a= ae tosh, Dal- * ¥ 2 —- stylosa conspicu pe) ‘an. 19.—Dr. Henderson, <4 gs in ns NOTICES OF NEW PLANTS WHICH ARE ee ane ee ate | » | ae o e es eS aceous plants cultivated in oe oe f : ait it is certainly one of the best of the genus. A large plant of | , EITHER USEFUL OR ORNAMENTAL. ‘sca wise pene : ag April, Eria pubescens, a hiaive of the East Indies, was blossoming pro- GALEANDRA Devontana. (Orchidaceous Stove Epiphyte.)— roe s + «| Feb, June, fusely; but, though curious, it not nearly ornamental me among the many interesting plants sent from British : ¥ | ~ as the Brassia maculata. Mrs. Lawrence also exhibited some | Guyana to Messrs. Loddiges by Mr. Schomburgk, concerning Mirbehn a und a capt ; | 3: flowers of Dendrobium nobile, beautifully disposed in a punnet ; | which the following memorandum is given by that traveller :— Pim . Van Dieman’ Lala a along with Trich. — je gosong a magnificent spike of —- anceps | ‘‘ During our peregrinations we have seen this plant nowhere an tis ‘ ‘Swan Rive bg pril, Aug, var, Barkeriana Of the bettidereest acid Scat ily culti- | else but at the banks of the Rio Negro, atributary of the Amazon, rE i spec ane! dead fap teed elses. ey te juced ; it will last a long tii ei in flower, | where, in the neighbourhood of Barcellos, or Mariua, we found Epacris spies cos a Rive x Jan. be ong whether gathered or suffered ain on th pint, a sin, a it growing in large clusters on the trees which lined the river, E thales ba se Ta : ‘ 3 . re » June, se were eet a month or more, when cut off, and pu’ sometimes on the Mauritia aculeata, or eyen on the ground Sain sm m 4 a . : ee sr Sept. -glass with . little water. Specimens of the inge where “4 om ponsinted of pe gee a ope Re “9 gecmaane via - ci Mexico . . +|J ane, . sinish deauuek Gold, _flomera ta. snd two fine spikes of | in growth, that some of the large clusters of stems which sprou ; gees a3 ey Euphorbia pes agg e also ree from Ealing P. Mr. from acommon root might have been from ten to twelve feet in xis arguta en, Pierre ay J une, Aug, [ser of Kingston, exhibited a collection of warbete circumference. The stems were often from five to six feet high; F emg tabs ncaa ee a ‘Tous y' 5 rs, pose ona So including E. mutabdilis, prestans, and vernix | at the lower part almost of a purple appearance, and changing ° ¥ it ‘ . ii z » May, ovata, Five seedling ‘iene were sent by Mr. Lowe, of the | into green higher up. As already observed, it is very abundant oie oe —Thi are garden hybrids. pals “nursery. From the garden of Mr. peland | about Barcellos, and equally in oy yidaiy et Tlarendaua or Can ag oo Greenhouse Plant.—Few was a crimson seedling of this , scarcely open, but different | P: ; I wonder, therefore, caped Spix, when he | p ce ave ups at Bf from over-care than this magni- from the B. coccinea in “* Paxton’s Magazine of Botany,” be igi Although the: io "Branco falls into the | f cent species, Generally treated as a stove plant, it sends in its nn being shaped like those of E. campanulata, while | Rio egro above Pedrero, we did not observe a single specimen £ f k a havi Paicisked . Ez. iaew aces like E. tmpressa. very in that river ; nor do I think that it is in the Amazon, as itis not up abundance of suckers, and haying flourishe for years Acacia, in the way of Was also sent by Mr. Lowe, | likely that it would haye escaped Martius. As its flower is not | without dowcring, is is generally ad away as a cumbronus Ni ens e Di - moniliforme, loaded | Only larger than the generality of its tribe, but likewise hand- weed. . So far requiring 8 ove heat, few plants culti. fine HCl flowers, and Oncidium Cavendish , | some, I requested the permission of his Grace the Duke of Devon- : sage a “ TE ant ‘ with its large yellow panicles, from Mr. gained a silver | shire that I might call it in honour of him, who not onlyis known y- niy requires Knightian medal : the latter Gua- | as one of the most successful cultivators of this, one of the most | protection ‘from ro as co ee der of the conserratayy tem y Mr. Bateman ; but Mr. Hartweg equently sent | interesting tribes among monocotyledonous plants, but of whose S proper place, where it continues growing, with a home a great number from —— which have been extensively | urbanity and condescension I e personally experienced nu- eee eee i een 35° and 45°. In sucha distributed by the Society; the species may be readily known by | merous ce m1, — to Europe.—Sertum Orchidaceum. | “0S* DM ri Fay ag b its thick sariehs leaves, which are folded together, and bear a | The flowers vi of a rich. purplish brown, with a | Situation we have seen 1 inches long by ral resemblance to those of O. carthaginense. Mr. beautifal white apecn-shenet lip brightly streaked with crimson. | 16 inches wide, and its stems 8 to 12 feet high, crowned to his G race th oes Shee exhibited some very + NUM nt ke Rooete ~ ited i he i mtu wi wer-spi ex i ven in winter. It is parti- e mo Aiming th ite variet i owe own ry, nei pia e. 5 . settia, in the m . by him in our last N it is very ornamen Last year it bore a cularly valuable from the tropical “magnificence of its fo- (p. 36) ; also a remarkable fruit of Madras Citron, or pte ripened in September, and hung Boon | the branches itt the ‘song. liage, and the rarity of any species of its order which measuring feet in circumference, and w eighing 6lbs. An | Two which were sent us were of a rich purple size | will flourish without stove heat. In the West of Sages _ enormous Shaddock, 2 feet 4 inches in circum: amferente and 5 Ibs. | and form of a hen’s egg, and had a very arose © sub-acid it would probably su ul x F dome. 15 oz. in weight, from a shoot grafted on oe attracted | taste. Itis probable they L @ good addition to great attention; the plant that produced this noble fruit bore | that class of vegetable productions from which aes axe ob- | Observations seem neéce: ery common altogether ten of about the thesame size: itis trained against the back | tained; for they were free from the peculiar animal flavour of the | error, which is likely to cad perpetuated, Py in all ee bo- wall ofa conservatory, and has been planted about eight years ; it | common Tomato, while they possessed all its snceutence, with | tanical catalogues this» species escribed as a stove- apparently lik heat, as the tub in which it grows is | the addition of a mild and pleasant perfume.— Botanical a ee behind the hot- paratus that heats the house. To TROPROLUM MORITZIANUM. fGegenbone climber) ,—' This Beau- Pp 1 ae fg ; these fine fruit a silver an medal was accorded. Mr. Til- | tiful nasturtium is a native of hence were aes Mr, Wi illiam Valentine, who recently emigrated to lery also exhibited some fruit of the Psidivem C. ceived by Mr. Murray, of the Glasgow Botanic Garden. The Di 1 Colonial Surgeon plant trained on the same wall as the Citrons; ripens | plants —s for gd first time in July 1840, in the | Soman at Campbelto wn. Ww et re Ee will enable him to pro- two or three dishes y doring winter, and when quite | Some _ grew more vigorously in the open border, but bi b tease ne q oe h mature they acquire a as black —— ss h seen showed no dispos' ition ‘e on a though it will rebel in apie! | ee is DO anic whee es, and to continue those mi- ble a strawberry in favour. Mr. Duncan, r toJ.M seasons ‘Homeen in the open air, fico e wers are moderately the low er orders of — in tineau, Esq., sent some fruit of the Pestiee edulis; but — large and very handsome. They are bright orange ma med wi <3 be hed ec were deficient both in flavour and colour, ew the s eantleese red, and have a bright,red fringe. — Botanical Magazine, — = eR = of ‘he being partially in ly | Itis not mentioned whether this handsome plant is annual or ngta in a greenhouse, has continued to to ripen comwantnn eet yal prs perennial ; should it be the latter, and prove as hardy as T. tu- Groom’s Princess Royal Pear,—This is a valuable ad- June. Some portion of the plant been trained in fes- | berosum or Chymocarpus pentaphytlus, it will be a most desirable | dition to the collections of wints er pears. It forms a toons among the elegant "P. Kermesina, has produced a beauti species for the flower-garden servative wall. ; ndsome, middle-sized, round o aE Gt - effe. the most intere: obj hown was the fruit EscuYNANTHUS Pa arses em: (Stove tlimber).— This fine : all, but Ba Ss of aie = d he es thick di he stoneless Litchi, from J. Reeves, Esq. ; sev f | plant is a native of Nepal, and was introduced to our stoves by with a sma open, shallow-placed eye, and shor this tuberculated fruit have been brought to the Society before, | His Grace the Duke of Devonshire. It succeeds well if planted stalk, acar cely sunk at its inertia e skin is of a but this was the most valuable, from its being destitute of the | in pots, though in its native country it is an epiphyte.— Bot. Mag. greeni lour, with a tinge of yellow, and slight large stone found in i ; the fiesh within is some- | The ee are —— at the ends of the drooping branches wy ae pri is melting, but rather what like a prune, both in con our, and was still | in large umbels. They are of a rich scarlet rane with a grey : hi bi onde good, although the fruit had been five or six years in England ‘taeon: each segment of ti the corolla ; the interior of the flower is — near the core; notwil ithstanding which its g Mr. Lord Sondes, exhibited some DI pale yellow. The leaves are opposite, four ‘OF ‘five inches iar, vour, and property of keeping, probably till March, ren- Hambro’ pes, om vines planted in April 1839; Mr. | Smooth, rather shining, and slightly serrated at nd oee. der it well worthy of cultivation. It is not so rich as that the fruit keeps longer where the depth of soil | The plant grows and fiowers freely either treated as an epiphyt i 's ble. but it a “f it would & in the border is not more than 2 feet 3 inehes, wi there or grown in a pot, and sisoxether it is one of the fost valuable acon 's Incomparable, i appears a) Ww eep about.a foot of dr. , than where the for the plants is 6 | stove plants that has ever been introduced. longer a A be As preclieet py B ; no fire-heat given them, and they have had totake | Fucmsta corymsiriora (Greenhouse shrub).—This noble plant Fe elar; =-Mr. Coc of Chiswick, 80 colaheaied their chance during late severe weather, th was raised by Mr. Stan — nurseryman, Bagshot, from — eeleew ha been as low as it has in London—viz. pore as Eeaeivet from Cusco, n Peru. = Pye Flora Peruviana th From the ee of the Society there were plants of two species is spoken of as acquiring the height of a man with A arieties as first-rate show- Homers: “or wr riaot Chorozema varium, Epacris campanulata, Sippheta stem but gall we eget to branch. we found by Ruiz and sag ‘Annette, Amethyst, Beauty, Bride tubifiora, Brasavola aye B. Martiana, Brassia eee Pavon in ds of Chincha ag Muna, to the north-east of : ster rs Bri BABE Bier Comte de some others. A branch of the new Mexican greenhouse . ms. Itis in this part of the world that aria, Co Co Citanion. Si Lopezia lineata was ited; itis the race of Fuchsias attains its great ] ty, levelops ronation, Corinne, rona, Criterio uenna, and because it produces a a pink | those colo d forms which | gained for it among the ae rubescens, Diad m superb Enily, during winter season. Among the apples were, name of Beauty-bush (Molle Ceantu). , Eliza s perba, rectum, Florence, Fi Pearson's Plate, Braddick'’s Nonpareil, Old Non 7s the subject of the present notice, odo er ap- | Posteri r Fanny. Gauntlet, Grand Duke, Gaines, Nonpareil (dessert apples of first-rate quality), 4: merene gh — by the authors of eae | ‘osea, y Garth, ? I * King berg, much esteemed in America, but less so in country; | and ri g the greatest Sconiecnceet of creat rticulture, Janus, Jupiter, Jehu, Jewess, Joan of Arc, Juba, Boston Russet, another American a enering cultivation serratifulia is a a “bush arith F ak flowers sa: gid and half foo, John, Life Guardsman, Lady Carlisle, Lady Murray, Lady in thi: try a dessert 3 Bedfordshire Foundling, a | growing in the manner . macrostema its varieti a) = Den handsome large sie — —— —— se, and ‘being Genticulata is described 12 feet high, poe foal beautiful sae fag Lady Douro, wed gone lea slightly acid, requring li sugar. were, Rouse Lench | when ie flowers, still of Mabel, Jy (@ great bearer and 9 but not ae Prince’s St. Ger- | F- Sifora; while F. simplicicaulis and apet similar | Nymph, Orange Boven, Oliver Twist, Prince main, or New Sweet St. Germain (an American pear of little | in appearance but yet more striking.— Botanical Register. ( ), Rienzi ans, Ruby, = peepee BCE AS, ipktag feet: fae Ceantaiah, dish, published in the Gardeners’ Magesine | Sultan, Sidonia, Una, Vi Vulean, and Wildiire. BENEVOLENT INSTITUTION FOR THE AGED AND INDI- | for January. Mr. Standish considers F. corymbifiora quite as | Florticuliural Cabinet. - GENT. oe AND bio WIDOWS. hardy as any Fuchsia in cultivation. It grows and flowers ‘anical and Zoological Garden.—We are glad 1.—The rele H. } freely aon “out in by ese Bo about the Bo od of May, | ;, +o A Re eas * ted Curator mem- | where a fine hea al manne o = 5 bl < it is in this state, it may be taken up plan’ arr aconserva- | Of this éstablishment. The Committee would not >| tory, or a pot, without the slightest injury. The plant isa very | have foun tere rce ‘or this : poorest jourseyiaen strong feeder, and can scarcely have too rich soil, or too much A Ga "s Contribution to the Shakespeare Sociely: ro! ity of | room to growin. Mr. dish says, that small fic ts —An announcement in the deners’. Chronicle of the nts, from | may be obtained by taking when in a flowering Gar ind an from | state, and planting them in thumb pots, placing each pot under formation of a Shakes espeare Society brings to my mind a ly ell-glass. They will strike immediately, and by shifting y yea k yee: Masiee we plants are now in is kent. trom 45.| since while read ing Romeo and Juliet. Paris, in directné deg. to 55 deg. of heat, and the plants.are as luxuriant in growth | his por f = ae me footsteps in the churchyard, say? as if it were the height of summer, while a plant of F. fulgens in yew-trees lay thee all along, es ipeni F tiles ane aber co to the hollow gr use is ripening i deci a Mr. Standish is of opinion that under the culture above described ae shall no foot upon the churchyard tread, 7 willin a few years it at least unfirm, with fi the h fe i wi whey ier bai lant).—. ing sound, na i nfirm coB- eee specie pera te moat desirable in cutration, dain of ie eee se ag p Doped ha 7 destroy (= Peg daemon or teflon fees Beet yo it. For without attributing to the poet the absurdity Jan. 23.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 55 peppy | destroyed. Tbe Rhododendrons and other ev ergreens on south | ger ti but Prof Liebig gives it a general appli- stating that the foot would make more noise upon loose | vibe : » Ned wemaataoen aatits those parge lbs ie | ge mination: but Professor ZF PP ground than on a beaten path, let the blow if you please toy) apy present pd gis caus. Ihave sack pleasure in cation. He points out that the foeascn sr ositio: sags ca be struck upon the rock unre still the Ont pe giana of | adding, that the heating of the Great Conservatory has bee ily becau £ plan any “loose, unfirm” earth would be the best of all pos- | highly ssc for during the fearge ipreeny ‘Sronty ight i have the power of generat wax, meer ~ abe abies ar : as kept to 60° with great ease, the " sible means ——— = being heard at any other a. heating pow ae hes rit bh iar sy ia a necessary to ap Sasa lati oils, which contain much hydrogen, and also tha’ Some ma naps call this, in contem iggers cou hci The heat Ege is of the most genial kind ; and hey csitibiies face compare it with that of rz vis ene on the from the coraene® of ai es structure, it is never felt any other source than water. The author here takes oc- shoe of the statue. But when it is recollected how mar- the leas f oppressive.—J. Paz on. sion to explain the reason why resinous woods decay vellously tru are, in general, Shakespeare’s ee more slowly than those in which acids abound. He of notices of rial as well as me =e and moral subjects ; apie tah me rse are? decay of timber = fare how seemingly intuitive ‘and u wipes om his wis sdo pet that The New Year's yt a Penny Almanack for 184 0 wig aE caabaee oda sgt Bee i aed quoted t Binns and Co,, Bath: Simpkin and Co., Lon Pica - essays with as —_ reg as the ala meron = Phat antes ike sanction of the Bath Visiting So- only be emitted by deecping vegetable | matter in _ propor meaner men; this little slip is not per! act unworthy o siety > a note by the new Society.—z A.rHovuGH but a trifle, yet this is one of those which sean I ne aeons een cid than ‘a The Lai ge oo " at Chatsworth. —A¢ 1S | deserves cnentitis mention for its good feeling and kind | 5). oy wary bodies: timber, the refore vot wie i ie dette incident occurred here 1 esday. One corner of this intentions. We recommend it as a eatin almanack for | ¢ an essential eth ga naa immense structure is ‘tad ite the reception of the rarer ecottagers. The following is a specimen of the tone of the Ni itrogen must be essential sia yrs were plants, small birds; a sparr fe ae (Falco wis.) perceiving book, al the information it conveys :— 7 mia tat weeds | . breaking in his fi 4 pong — ge ppg A pa at wonder in a little thing.—What a wonderful structu : a e pa oe of glass, which” are cat feet rine Such thing ts ved =e — waphertet that ecg should This ‘act, although of very recent discovery, does not was the violence of his blow, that the glass was only 9 Sete ed belong to Pr eae 0th tial Te oe fr 188 forated sufficiently to admit him. The crash brought 3 : by Mr. Rigg, in the osophi nsac % col autow Cupiiereal: Clie aabioewk asi? steed _ is of growing up into other ni aa so on for ever ! as Boussingault had also ascertained that it was of g ae he ara Psi his tel ig victims, ‘with every pele h sol ba ue ae ret ie big 2a occurrence ; and isle in 1 2% article ind ed epend 2 ich produce trees, almost, if not quite, as Ik question. Théodo cain in ong do it eee weeks since easant in 7 al q a Pee : Signe the spe Ts but he oaee killed by as the oak. O Or think of a grain of wheat : ‘it ape bec previously Ratio rey ie germina seeds absorb in ittle the ig flo ogen. What specially belongs to the author of the mixed with a little bran. Tn fact, when it is ground, mork before us is the ‘discovery that it is exclusively from The Nursery of Audiberi, at Tarascon.—We regret | there is nothing else to be seen; but besides these, it to announce the ve st entire destruction * nag the ‘ = “4 pol cert alittle plant, too small to be made out by and b drogen) that vegetables derive this important ele- finest nursery in the a outh of France, by t nun- | common sight. When one rf these grains or seeds is put ™ ogen) dations of the Letters from outpace pos th. it b ake Ba hich —. into mast earth, i ns to water, which so that M. Audibert’s ios a be estimated at less than daceuik sank oh it A The “Title plant i rad nside begins to v Witagen ee v aye pee van 300,000 rena (about 07.) fom and i cody bate 2 all delicate root peeps out the source he supply, because it cannot be made to enter TNGN MEMODAR ‘om one end of the see » even ne ARDEN MEMORANDA. side, or perhaps with the root end uppermost : but oo ad sae on -saveea th tke oaiEe phiax med ‘The Bent has litle root, ether it comes out at the top or bottom ayy re we find what may be paste as Dr. Liebig’s 8 been lower here by 5 degrees than in the memorable frost in es seed, s ippetinily i eit sh anh grows in : chief discovery January 1938, Itis fortanate that the snow covered the ground | direction. er a little white shoot comes out the ndeed small quan: to the depth of 11 inches. On the night of Wednesday,'the 6th | other end, which turns upwards, and becomes green pew pom eager’ cas tind atmosphere aa sa an aie had ee stan ache” pionlky spread soon as it gets into air and light ; rere thus we fare 2 4 | might furnish the nitrogen required by plants ; but o zero at 9 a.m, on Friday. As theregister of weather is kept here | little plant. In the ge ae the Nes itself spoils and ne ism ae I believe, the first to show, what carta with great care, these indications aor fron upon. Upon | decays—or, as St. oe lls it, d The flour changes ys been suspected, although not proved, looking round since the temporary thaw, I find that vegetables | - . s and small shrubs have been mach preserved by the snow; but into a kind of gaa fi y sugar ’ which ‘ts sucked up ig oe fare Hala the atmosphere. He found it 1e effects of the cold are visible on the Inurels, inbrustinns, young plant as its rst nourishment ; and t husk in rain water oe snow water, * possessing an. offensive sweet bay, arbutus. The Portugal laurel is - e hardy | shrivels and rots : while sige oo. grown up. wp Bem of perspiration and animal fact which than the common kin fine plant of Viburn: eden waa issimum, | tho means times as | seed, and at at last prodeces | : icin’? And indeed the that stood with the protection is a le in 1638, Ce oe this many other seeds, leaves ne doubt respecti ng a ae mae aes year. The Deodar is, however, safe. There are nearly 300 z r here, from 2 Ce to 11 feet high, all quite i i gad = oe in’ all Bi fot “A _ yey is nothing like this. | o¢ putrifying animals must furnish an abundant, an No ey"s Nursery, pion h.—The ey folks consider tch is a arkable invention: and a man vos be | ce of that = meiple. In illustration of the this a severe winter; yet the thermometer has never been lower than 18°, on the morning of Friday, the 8thinst. On that night = down as med = should < it could be made by pr ra of "the oma of ammonia in the air for the a hothouse heated with Mr. Rogers's conical boiler and open chance ; but how uch m a ge — a “watch purpose vegeta’ n, the a uthor shows that if a pound gutters of slate was only 1° lower in the morning than when it | bei watches slike tself! Yet a seed was left at 5 o’clock in the evening s this; and every corn-field in aaa t time contains fal sai doe : ; a enrhyn.—We = a : : 1d of 40 severe winter for Cornwall; and Lam app paca ‘that any millions of seeds, each of which i is far more wonderfa aa | ward of 80 ib. i ammonia, or 65 anges of aloes, of our exotic shrubs, &c., will suffer by it.’ On the 6th, 7th, and | the best watch. The oe is, that men make | i , +h sv) 8th, the thermometer indicated 7? Fe and 18°, Since then but’ God makes seeds. i alb d gluten in 2650.lbs going a snes it has not fallen lower than 29° with ‘asional showers of sleet umen an gin in the day, which I haveinvariably pte to be more injuriousto | ™&" make w watches comes _from God, or ang be a = 100 tons of of beat + root, which are the yearly produce tender plants than a dry frost. We have now a fall of snow. g a field; but it is less than the He ea and : Loddiger Nursery, Be ckicy —In me Grebiisceons house there | which a seed is e keeps in his o ands: that w pak = corn, which might grow on Som surface is a plant in flower which is supposed to be a new species; fi its phase a e it would seem to ele the Post hey actin. aes know that we “have : Maker ute Master - ad would contain,” Therefore Py $2 Fhere is but one spike, which has 14 flowers upon it, though | 28d may serve him with reverence and godly fear, dditional ly of i there is little doubt that it will be much finer when flowerin: : a g A ‘exists in every part of in the roots, ore favourable season ; still it is inferior to few of the spe- Organic erm fry, and i fag oo! ‘ i cae § , , | in the stem, and in all blossoms and sgl cies already in our collections. The petals are white, Bona a few and Physiology. By _ teva can M.D. : ted. | cemdition. "It is supplied by xara i which carries it lip is of pale purple, with dark stripes of the same colour. The by ee Piney te . D. mdon: Taylor and | pans the air, in which it ia s suspended, im conse- plant is a native of the Philippine Islands. Two beautiful plants Walto: (Thi ird n tic 2.) bh idi i um ar eri 5 with of Oneid thorhy. reves, ad the berth ee” dace Hla eae _, This ammonia eos all vegetables, las a of the finest species of this genus, was also in great luxurianee Under the eee, . light aie moisture ti leaves the nitro ogen which enters into the composition o upon a block of =i suspended trom the roof, ‘There were tw aaa obi i creditoers pel seer wet both owed Ccaeome ceruteu, | appropriate carbon. A certain —— of the genera which falls with eularly the former. Dendrobium aureum, with its violet-scented This is an gone in Vegetable Physiology, concerning | rain evaporates nwith thew 3 but anothe ger lossoms, and D, Pierardi, are alsoin a magnificent state, espe- | which no erence of opinion can exist. There are tion is taken up fyi nthe sroes of p er gs entering into cially the latter. Galeandra Devoniana,a charming plant, with those, however, who find it duces ine oth ri uten, and a num- flowers of uncommon size and beauty, is now in perfection, with 4 h d md * - be. oth nds Cyrtochitum maculatum, another warelieey epiphyte. A fine and | 8° lig! al and elastic a fluid as we breathe can be of Upon pis pith 9 Agen Well-grown plant of Phaius maculatus is unfolding its beautiful lidated into the livi ving fret, "the "freak herbage, or A pecan. Foor ure the application of aed Boner ip & great profasioe n.—Ja. 6. : : whl gate ets only by the formation of am- new opea from Guatemala, with deep yellow flowers, i and very handsome, is now in sin Polar beauty.—Jan. 20, ? ore ~ tha mpetions ee “ae ainly that is one a the most — ts Shests t, under dif cont dies Henderson's, Pine-Apple Place-—A splendid specimen of Lu- | Mysterious operations of Nature, which converts the The quantity of gluten $ culia gratissima is in blossom here; the plant is about four feet | breath of our bodies into the green leaf, the ae ag Sing ef cultivation, illustrates this. Glaten isa parm high, and literally covered with delicate pink flowers, whic luscious fruit, or the tall trunk of the monarch of the | in nitrogen, and the of corn exhale the most delightful odour. P. t é speciosum is ex- cops been found that th rtional ity of hibiting its d : flowers, with several small plants of | W004. Liebig shows, hor =} by a formal ; re tut: ie Pape pase ooo Fdinaettig pulcherrima. In the greenhouse there is a good show leulation, that although tk i: t fied y different in different samples of rad oF ra new tea #. Foran Hlacs, Kalmias, tulips, hya- | does not constitute more than one-tenth per cent. of the | between 3-33 and 35-1 per cent. ; inths, —Jan. Chatsworth Gardens, Jan. 19, 1941.—I very much fear the atmosphere, yet that this ‘st mn —. wheat 4 soil mamured wit bh — ra. mints are Bu ga be Erekiats 5 felt Sapnevost the = pemet cell he big tg results which - ae i te. One —s ie Ere ons Ms eiatisy of = Dir} for the which I $a acolumna of air o! cow-d rom: has heen general, covering the ground som and bar : coy eventing it penetrating to the roots of pe @ dl. en = weight rests upon every square of the surface of th Se oe ama alg cht har e ‘had to Tament Josses to the sam earth; the diameter of the earth, and its superficies, pe parts of starch. ; om one hundred of wheat sa om best sete the lat not in specimens,—for Bow gs eae — mat likewise known, so a il with human urine ich, when putri sorry to _ postponed bythe i sat tie perio is, Lam | be calculated with the greatest exactness. The thousa fied, abounds in a ee ‘under : on of ammoniacal January the Sth, we had here 30° of frost; on the 7 or arate, | P + af thin i. bonie acid, ee goutsinn peace = salts =) yao as much pata ‘sa of gluten. ; Be tinea feu 2 Cclow zero, and throughout the aay it re: 27 per cent. carbon. By this calculation it can be shown, | | By means of this theory of ssity of ammonia to ed 265 Of frott, Te fs deans, thermometer at night indi- aie ee mosphere contains 3000 billion lbs. of carbon ; | plants, the author explains many other facts besides the nad caanpitcte killed from those st_peseot io ‘stingush inoog tity which amounts to more than the weight of all | relative value of different kinds of animal manures. quite killed ; but the ‘fonowiogare ‘dead to the 5 <— plants att ts anes nent or brown coal | he aseribes er effects of a thunder-storm Anne lca rang Somenties, | which exist upon This carbon is, therefore, | 8 raira; Atriplex halimus, Buddlea glovota, Lara ‘nobis eed more t the sheets mye a as jocioen: for ee its varieties ; Phillyrea ilicifolia, levis, latifolia, and media; | T°quired- The quantity af carbon co ee. Po: Erica acinar, mediterranes, and australis; Viburnum tings and | 18 proportionally still greater.’? dense ammonia within their Bed and so become elay, cond its v s, lucidum, and hirtum; Hydrangea arborescens, and |- coe however, as is carbon to it i ‘powerful manures. The former absorbs 90 times its orgica ; Photi istoteli : » as is plants, it is by no : : gersica portend = ne roses of sorts. The following are | me@ns the only element of their elas, This leads us to | volume of ammoniacal gas, which bores be again separated more or less injured :— Picea Webbiana, Cunninghamia scooms, ms, next proposition + simply aaa a with water. pro cag ap- narod ey i in sy. wey ° > an plants which ma 56 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. aa [N°- 4 . thus fixing in the soil, in the form of a soluble ee tree | tivity is reqnired without, everything which it was possi ble ammonia which would otherwise be lost with the water | Manor ae cate th reeds Seng —— aaa “our nd at | han lescription will be found in the best order ; that evaporates, But for all the details concerning ‘the | astock of labels, flower-sticks of different strengths, and layering- & y' & the work tet anures, we must refer the reader to | pegs will be carefull red up; d ts will have been washed e rk i and arranged ne ccording respectiv izes; pot- erds broken ; compo: equired for early potting will have been pos st d more a ee the pres f : mixed and frequently turned ; frame and other light t in us: p- we fin e asse e quantity’ Of food | wilt have be efully cleaned and repaired; and the very fire- that perey a 2 e Nw their nourishment diminishes holes, in consequence of a thorough clea: ‘ing, will have assume increa: é proportion as it contains more or | #9 Unusually comfortable appearance. uld expect every place to be lean, even to the out-buildings, that to find cob- less of the substances Saat nitrogen. A horse may ebs, a journey to the stable should be necessary, where they with potatoes, which contain a allowe dispated possession n the principle of the more 77 9 intity of nitragen - bus t life thus bi gape bier hs bri flies. ; In Set eof gee rasan aol of koa en shou ready for operations the mo weather a Pp its. As regards the hothouses, we would repeat what we size nor retrength, and oi under every Mapcrsyro Now, | have said before,—use the utmost caution against exciting a ra- ith g sie we ubt this pid pols whilst the weather remains dull; for hay my Leung ha t bee fact extrem If we are not much mistaken, ian are proofs to ra contrary, eign in Irela rch and we should be glad to learn the experience of s of our The Flora of Yorkshire. W od two Plates. By H. ve carne bog ndon : Lon, ngm n, 1840. _8vo 0. ady bee sure ‘lose of “Britain by the works of Sowerby, Hooker, and others ; still there is much to do, and this y be Tick local Flor: ores, like the Flora of Yorkshire, than proach fall hen of the physical geography o: he country, i whi . that “ Yorkshire is more ric vege- tabl ms than ‘most other r English co counties ; its surface secompanied by gradations of elevation from the sea- shore oe ms of 2400 and even 2600 feet high ; its mates ries accordingly, eer it lie es in such a _ ae ecmcos ie Scottish and English earth This ee ae us for the e distribution of plants pe . thirty-se northern lim’ cluding Dianthus cargo, Hippophac rose. Mr. Bai yh dig he show the caune P eaks of | structure, aspect of in I reas the =a cabana of eo plants. which this gical botani features of shire familar to all who will take come even to glance over it. After = follows the mer copay of Pinsis, oe ranged according o th tural and which, though a mere Tist of pha agree the ar geste | es irons the plants, poetical allu- and sometimes _ ing. ee names of such sts in pore es. SUMMARY OF oF CONTENTS, pes fal almost total once of bright sunlight, plants ae to giv — _— hal i eak, pale growth and sterile flower trawberries will throw up trusses of bloom incapable of supporting themselves right; roses will drop theimformed buds; and n throughout the whole forcing department similar evils will presen emselves, which are ti fi laid to the charge of unpropitious Ss . The state of ther has certainly great influence in forcing; but these fects are more ae only caused by injadicious treatment, in prmempeea force plants by artificial means, beyond what their functions = amar ven to perform. —KITCHEN GARDEN AND ORCHARD. gig and Forcing eee nt, —Giv r which it is desira- be prima show Sait early ; they pee: tent have a slight addi- of bottom heat ; but be cai refal not to excite the other plants ic cumeanvelnion growing too waity, y water or extra heat. Vivery.—During the cherie see of the weather, allow forc- proceed ing to as paneer as possible, and in the absence of sun a corresponding on of artificial ——_ should be hdrawn ; when Scout are sufficiently advanced, let them — at two eyes above the bl £ACH-HOUSE.— ar ead up rather early cessary. Cuerry-nouse.—The thermometer may now be kept to about 50° maximum, mening a free poor magee mo of br F air freely n the pone oon, that less fire may be ne- upper corner wi and . admit a little air at night. or lung be well prepared, beds may be made for early kinds. ASPARAGUS.-~-Make up a bed to succeed the made in the first week a ‘this month. See also to oicemaions or stream Rhubarb, French Beans, Strawberries, Radishes, Mustard-c and sow Cauliflower and Lettuce on a slight ho tbed. Out-Door and Orchard Department. Clear off all crops hag oor en 8 frost, wheel them ina heap, and cover them with lim clean banwrons 4 the cin’ of Brussels Sprouts, Savors, = per green crops: but remove their rotten heads and old leaves, and leave the stump: — pro- duce s: spronts Ontons may be sown in a warm situation to draw for salads. Prat sowing of ‘dstiat Marrow or Prussians may now b made; draw some fresh to those under the walls. Lerrvce.—Sowings may be made of the hardy green Cos and brown Dutch ina sheltered “ape SPinaca.~ Bjorn eed and remove decayed lea’ Orchard.—Leave all your saw. ips smooth pay pie at- opm > this, - ne as those oom with the knife, ‘ wid Faeal of wi may be removed and bes ance of the trees; but after — oo ey = steam. hnowe. —If the plants; tilt each light at the egress of the tees remain to vtech Bes =; we = warding of ater iperwiition “in very cold waahni, and. twice uch nailing can be better performed at favourable oppuituntities, IIl.—FLOWER GARDEN AND SHRUBBERY. In-Door Department. Srove.—Orchidaceous plants, as they gtowth om their buds becoming prominent, aan be re-potted and supplied with more heat and moisture}; great care must be aa not toi as their roots in repotting; it will be found also the _ feted. rable opportunity of eradicating insects, if they are infested show indications éd Gardens, tha t we are induced to —— we subject again into our pore tg in the Bands of those ae) have the means of acting “upon Pee “Indo- of philus ” ” gives an account of the important the India ‘Company, in in Se . overland mail; amon; thousands of y r Cedars, now growing in communication.—A . paper on — Hawkfly commences a er ects useful and mischiey- ns.—Some buildin on the Management id several letters in our Home Corres- pondence, will interesting to pi —Pro- r Henslow’s suggestions t Mi we have no doubt, be acted ~~ ae some page our +h + pels us to omit our Forei ign Comme ondence-—In ‘Garden Memoranda will be foun , from Derbyshire, ——— Devonshire, Cornwall_— mi oceedings of is i day by mead Beneraen Gs rden - On bo nt the d, object bene- all countries, and Horticulture is so highly valued, — — be Nea want of support for the ———— CALENDAR OF oon ee for aro ffs onal Most of the out-door ns usial at been iy eoekuak ane —_— ire porary yg of effectin: ch improvement when, in. consequence ¢. f the delay, & more thaa t ut GREENHO eedingly careful that no plantis watered except in actual pcr of “t; _put in cuttings of any plant it is desi ange te whenever they can be obtained. Pits s.—Cuttings of such nts as it is desirable to iar in jabundance i in the open ground should be ‘pat on that they may be ready in May,—as Petunias, Calceolarias, Salvias, Verbenas, Heliot seri fien &c. _Out. Door eee Climbing plants on walls o: His m ow be praned and nailed or tied, hardy anid and {shrubs of alk kinds may be pruned and removed; finish rough digging shrubberies, if not don the Pair nota RSERY AND FOREST DEPARTMENT. Noersery.—Hardy eg trees may be transplanted in open weather 1 straggling or ill-placed shoots from young forest and ornamental trees dig and prepare ground for spring planting, clean seeds, &c. Forest anD Coppice Woops.—As the weather is now favour- able for = an ea it Peon be proceeded with, always bearing in mind that the should be so arranged a: standin made to answer e of a sunk esi it will ne becomplishing two desirable ends e time: pitting, i ues nie: &c., may be proceeded with, in preparation { janting. is urrounding sur- face to be collected to each plant; continue pruning, felling, &c. as before,—Joseph Paxton, Chatsworth. ENTOMOLOGICAL NOTICES. to search for the grubs of the Cockchafenthe s ro-moth, Wire-worm, and the caterpillar of the Winter Corn-moth (. about the end of Aug or of September, subsisting st on the roots of bat afterwards devouring tender ot be brerconre wr as soon as it begins to vege- trag- As inter app these caterpillars penctrate two r three suman deep into the earth, and make an oval cell, i which they pass $s the winter without doing any mischief. im the first few ~ aa of spring, they leave their winter quar- ters, . m the — of the corn till poe when they become brown besten ane pom remaining in this state for abo rated month, the hs com caterpillars, when full fount, aboat am inch and aif long, and as thick ; their colours are brown and grey, in the mornings of fine days; | much resemble the clods of earth under which fos turk that they the: may be readily ov cna paill od night- cease see those of m fires in the night- — s sprinkling of bitter herbs, bpevse it i ; the caterpillars by hand-picking, eh taba them intoa ce ra —— crushing t to teir natural ene es the birds, whic’ are ways attracted by — _ ubs of this ‘and other insects, and never by the seed beings the hood = crow, the rook, the raven, the eee oe the ma spie are easin: them of the Weather near Taney for the Week ending Janu. ean, 1841, as haga pom at the Garden of the Horticuitaral Se ociety, Chisw B AROMETER, eine tiasican | | | Wind. | Rain, Ja | Min. Max. | — (ecu. | Friday aay 29.559|' 39 | | oe |} SB. iB Sata 8 29.631 29.365, 52 | pes | 46.0 | S.W. 16 Sund. 17 | 29.729! 29.605), 52 | 45 425 | SW. | ‘en Mond. !18 | 29.725 29.685!) 47 | 33 40.0 | Web ae Tuesd.19 | 29.9:8' 29.778) 36 | 28 $2.0 a... oe Wedn. 20 | 30.182 petted 34 | 92 | 28.0 Poe Thurs. 21 | 30.505) 30.3 38 | 25 1.5 N.W, Average ions | | 37.2 | | .59 15. Cloudy nig 16. Hany, vane wien gears west wind ; thawing rapidly. 17. Overcast through the day ; continued thaw, & clear at night. 18, in; overcast; rain at night. 19. Overcast; rain; slight snow - 20. Cloudy and cold; clear at n frost at night. St. Frosty ; fine with sunshine through the day ; clear at n: night, The thickness of the frozen crust, where the —— was ed, was, eich to the tha h 4 cig in, with north wind; sharp State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 15 Years for the ensuing Week sve he 30th January, 1341, Se sh Os ape of )Greatesty Prevailing Winds, a2 Z 28 = g = Pte in|quantity| ~ ; os ge siss which it} — of se |e Jan. sian bla *| Rain ned.| Rain. |“) Su. 24) 43.5 | 33.6 |38.5 5 0.52 in.} 1} 2} 2} 2) 2! 4) 2) 4 M. 25} 42.2 | 31.2 36.7 4 0.90 Hj 2} 2} 3) 1) se Tu. 26} 43.2 | 32.6 |37.9 5 0.34 1} 4) 1} 2—!} Sp na W. 27} 42.0 | 31.7 |36.8 6 0.21 2} 3} 2)—| 2) 5} — Th. 28} 43.2 | 33.2 38.2 | 7 0.17 2} 3) 1/—j|—| 7} 2j— . 43.2 1.0 |37.1 3 ay 1) 3/—]} 1) 1] 2} Sta 42.2 14 \36.3 | 6 0.20 2} 2i2 21 In the above period, the highest degre: mpc: ring in this portion of January, was Saheiinneed eas “the ‘sath, fa in 1834—thermometer 56°. The coldest night was that of the 29th, in 1839, the thermometer indicating 17°. REPORT ON COVENT ee ee berg FOR THE WEEK aoe NG JAN. aa Tue supply o eats es, and ne “Ger. Ds cel- Tent saving the res /not withstanding the unfavotrab le weather, Fruits—There are a few peed 5 a m Orange, Court o! » Lemon Pippin, Gaiden Rennet, _Royal R and American New-Town Pears are plentifu 4 a ual pl vo f Red Cabb: rather small and scarce. Carrots are of first-rate excellence, and the supply h een good during the whole week. Turnips argeud —= and the supply moderate. Onions are large and of first-rate quality. Leeks ar uundant. Celery is neither plentifaln nor te a Spinach is scarce, but of superior qua- pee erusalem ke: ity. iS 1S . The Tulips. Wastincas aoe &c. are ter flower than they were last w Several plants of Calla are fin 9 es, Christmas Rose, Violets, Epacris, and Heaths. Besides these flowers there are bunches of shh Briar and Ver- = which by their fragrance remind us of the bright days in ‘ PRICES, Sarvapar, Jan. 23, 1841,-FRUITS:— Apples, dessert, per bush, 3s 6d to 18s | Pummeloes, 9d to Pears, destert, sve. 33 to 12s Almonds, per peck; 7 toe Apples, p. Ib. gh herncneromre — - = ‘oreign, per Ib. ls esnuts, per peck, Shaddocks, each, 3s to Walnuts, te bush. 202 Oranges pr. sorphe Nuts. a per 100, _ to 208 “Bitter, per Noor be' 1S tis wee t Lccutpge. Lea om = to os Pa per Gs to 122 VEGETABLES. Savoys, per to 2s Leeks, per doz. bunches, 2s 6d to poet pire fe pick. 2s to 4s Garlic; aot 2 Bd Cab Sees h. 3s to 5e a ts, per Ib. Is to ls od ink B Sprouts, hf. sve, 28 to 2s 6d ibe, Tas » 73 Gd tO German Greens, or Kale, doz. coreg cond or Middling, colt ew Broccoli, White, pr. bch 4s to il prue, or Small, 3# — Brown, 26d to Sea- r et, Is od to Potatoes, per ton, cg 6l. Lettuce, per score. “et seg “ee — New, per Ib, 2s. Endive, per score, 2s Jerusalem arches per ~ | Celery, ae ome se ore 23 Isto 2088 ieve, ls. 6d Small si es. 9d to Turnips, White, per doz. b., 2s Wi Lor ere Carrots, per doz, bunches, 4s to éz Parsley, per sieve, 22 to ae ee Parsneps, per doz. 6d to Is Thyme ae pay a doz. behs, wes Red &, per doz, Is to Sage (green) per doz. bunches, 24 10 Scorzonera, per bundle, 1 Zarregon (dried) per dow. a PT per Nendin, Is Ca Mint (dried) pe: banchen a ie per bundle, 166d tobe ‘eppermin ) pox dos. So eet is es ones Eom medi g te Si vag a ee ), per beh. — Spanish, per doz. {4 6d to 6s Has Gs Se. Tt tg Ponte eed JAN. 23.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 57 re Sir E. J. must not place too much pais nfidence in the assertio of reviewers. “The waiters in the be Review, who says ‘that the red a am = reat 0 have been introduced some tw three (qu. red) y ago fro. dg Contin ent, and ba calls it an Pato evan ntly ttn eckhinns of the subject on which he writes ; for the submarine oak timber at Hastings, ie cekine say nothing ani our oldest buildi —The bes! - which to fell timbers oe afer ie fall of the leat, because at that time the wood is drie 28 Lad a =] po or s ae} i ES elled i but the bark must be stripped - soon as it will separate toon te the wood, and the tree should then be lefttodry up till the succeeding autumn, when it may be fe! ng It is true, Ss. Fe states, that il the practice in the ries to cut ¢ e tap na of forest ‘trees as gn pra in — rows where th be were sown. The erymen r tree- i space an object. private nurseries, here Soack is jens consideret es is sufficient to ¢ i ‘OW! sow s corns and chesnut! r ud to cut their tap roots as recommended in the calend; The cone from Mr. bert is t a m calls Abies Morinda, and is one of the two Hi pri We have not room to continue a discussion about Wallich’s Abies Smithiana, but must confine o ives to thi additional observation :—If re is any foundation for Mr. bert’s upinion that the A Smithiana, tet figure and description, is imaginary, then there and sig peepee be cancelled. Butwe a i that Dr. Wallich and his draftsman ¢ justice of his expe! alone can give, cannot ay fe will with e ever-varying, spare aterhieci A hanes how- ever, is not the place to explain how “ to do this or that ;” what he wishes us to teach must be taught as ae separate subject. We have in preparation some pluin rules how best to do common things, and they shall appear as soon Res nou find room for them ; but our motto must be Festina lenté. Mr, iting will find Mande a - Wh veolens succeed in such circumstances as he describes ; better, in fact, than in a warmer house, where it has a a tendency to’ grow too much to leaves. Tweediana i trae does house, but it seen in greater beauty wher: ne rare thas S waeae aoc Brion so The new Mexi Bai oe a@ green- hou: sires os mote bs namely, | # longifolia, tyrianthina, purga, and Ramana gh un certain bloomers in a cold gre eenhouse. rtd it is omer to have them there, ech ai med re sea Geom in heat early Pp as the Eo, eon rt for them. 0. apo sia ogise iam Mr A, Saut for his paper on the cou Kscomb, i in Number IL., having e vi list he wishes for; but it is tin and pies more space than can be at present spared. In the mean while it is better to ti a correspondent’s taste, than send him names the application of which he cannot understand. e rchidaceous plants ia the vicinity of Rio itself can scarcel any novelt i i ro) i viously unk * which tion produces something previo Witness sok Brocklehurst’s noble a a a pomad on miscuously with other thin; ust n wie dateicn is fgrrccg ert. cinaencen ig aa We shall es much indebted to our correspondents for ad- pene facts iy ing the Bark Matopely, and we trust our e frierd be able to sg mie the tes he expe and deserves to » ip bene ‘ong deco: 0- er, and wash plant well it two times till he finds the insects are dead ; w the plants should be well ith clean water. A will be found very useful to cleanse the axils of skins of the chermes, which the water does sre through them than wood of i — or ii Ll and contains a great deal of useful information concerning Loudon’s cape ae Nore of plants is gre pas useful to eae = persons. S. D. had better look at them, and see if they are — he wants il Dh. peat inform us what the depth is of the water-trough in bin cucumber-pits >? Rusticus will be able to large hurserymen, either in paces or coun is wants of an’ Covent Garden, is celebrated for the large supply of annual Sears which he always has to dispose of. Messrs. ingh Liver- pool, are the nearest nurserymen likely to possess stove-bulbs. F. D.—The seeds of the Laburnum e: 1 isonous, and y fatal cases have Soe in consequei of their having heed eaten by chilur They contain a deleterious prin- ° give cultivated and indigenous can be had f two guineas ; perhaps, ate Macreight’s Manual of British the Botany may answer urpose, as it contains a great many of the most moa honky} kinds. Will some one give us the of his management of the Musa Cavendishii ? C.D.—. = observati 'e very acceptable to us. The advantag f iron roofs for hoehouses re chet they ey more durable ice wi wood, and allow a far pg as of ha viene of temperature, which can only tion, which is sive, and oe consumption of fuel. We should say, use iron if prefer success and ‘ul form to it, and can vine ly upon the attention < your people ; but employ wood if you ar af i a to study economy. T. G. will recei answers Scie i EP . pe ges oy happy to hear from “oy Clark, mina to G, Edgbaston will be able to procure Luculia gr: ines com any nurseryman who grows greenhouse plants. ——* Peg not un- derstand from his letter whether he wishes to purchase or exchange. A Subscriber will find an account of a tae ent of the vine Appleby in an early number preg: Jor ; we have not able to make room it. ae een da oe ~ the Vine to his attentive i If he will ii perusal in while. form us whether he Pair rer hags amg his heode early and with high nm what e will give him the names of the C. 1 D., hichester, writes that being, like our cor- res| iy Pile Buy yon of ce i a collection of bulbs, he bre pee a list o which heshould be happy to ex- he ch: DOF any one, i he would state what bulbs could offer in Antholyza zthiopica ; caus (seedlings 13 incu old) ; Crinum eg from Rio, he Lindleyanum, but has not yet flowere * Hippeastcam (Henslow), iia colednws inside ; r+ hahhoor one ; Ismene calathina (very fragrant); Ismene pedunculata; ta’ purpurea (offset) ; Zephyranthes ida; Zephyranth rey Amaryllis bella- ionna, Sprekelia formosissima, Nerine venusta, panning: luteus, are so easily procured, t he has t them, but PAilo-Bulé may have ifhe likes. The questio: B. is answered by the randum :—* The isa simple, and as I know expe- rience, remedy for i When most effectual = Feumaineaete in 1831, all, or sah greater part of the apple trees were py infested with this pe: i i kind is destruction to the pay aes I,- early in the ae of 1832, procured a small quantity of rape oil, the least e: could purchase, and instruct my men, witha pater’ brush, o rab eof oil upon every tree in the garden, or orc! where there were signs of the insect. After this had been done about a month, I sent him over them , and from that time to the pres there has bows no appearance of A blight, agh there is ple: f it in this neighbourhood.”—W. Bury Hill. Have an cee our correspondents tried ? 4 correspondent desires to know whether Mr. W. P. A: anthor of a practical treatise cn the growth of the Cacumber, i is NEWS OF THE WEEK. T hom apc near approach of the Session of nse ment is the principal topic of attention, and the prepara tions for peat event are = a Her Majes: will open the Session in person, in a Speech from the throne, to which RES NY * on accou nt of the i t ; all parties look for- ward with wu nusual interes Several ch s will e place in a House of Commons, in consequence of va- cancies which have occurred during the recess, and the app! am elections are regarded with not by - dherents of opposed pi - The re t floods haw caused considerable damage both in't the metropolis and the provinces; at baer they have been Se ta with dros of life, and property to a large amount has yed. Mr. eG onnell’s ina th th }. out ce, sb as be Tepe qreition does not _appear a Seeks we been re- ance we learn that the Conrenton ime ded between Amid ena sa the authorities of Buen Ayres, has gi an energetic est from the ayo French srt any in «the repeals and sap ia my is oe - ‘vacillating polic ticy Oo! of M. Thiers; it is, ow ecessary to cover the extraordinary chiefly by ve ate we arse policy ; sit hs isexpected that this and upon tional res ae bes sea er ce of peace. In “sina pate re! spestng lesional peste — Ecclesiastical q ns, have gi rise to a civil wai two esa ry ea seg poh already been iene with seri consequences ; vigorous efforts have been made t h break, and it is now hoped that Advices from ¥ s de- manded a further delay, in order to repl; is m of Spain; and that Spain to wait until the 3st; on which day General to i _ the te 2 the affair be not then’settled. From Constantinople, we | th submissi f Mehemet Ali has been accepted, but the Porte | will enter into ni plies r submission of the Pacha is therefore > regarded promise, upon the fulfilment of epend. | Seott, | authority as as Viceroy d pr. ie Wome me eine. Tur Courr.—Her Majesty, Prince Albert, anj the will leave pede nm of Mr. Ayres w! a, oe ae in Der. Court Windsor for town this day. During the DG tnd bates isisbea tat week, Her Majesty ga quadrille-parties distin- from some Fellow te the Horteaitarsl See Society wholes the pivter guished visitors at the Castle, and the Prince enjoyed the ad yearn ne og if sulphur is mixed een —— not } diversion of hunting in the Great.Park. It is again an- prt a) ts adeod sete : ail pasted ; hipaa 3 ee e : pte? he glass, or stoves, or on the heated pipes tamed that ofthe — plece Bt liam iamentary.—It is finally arranged that Her Ma- spider. ovrnis pest is and driven off by moisture, which it abhors; but it must be atmospheric moisture urserymen do not sell pina of frait ren tom the Hordcltura Soity throug h the eS We We are mit tinqunit experiments on soda in gardens, and should my pee ti hear the result of trial. eo ents are in progress’in. in the garden of cultural Society, but itis an situation. Indagator will easily understand i for him at present. halt We quite agree with oar excellent cocaine Chectapdiiiend _C. B., that the practice of putting real names to communications highly conduces towards maintaining a gentlemanly tone | and courteous- case of mere Bathurst, D. +» Delta, J. D., Pe ere Ae Flore, Versailles, G. G. Watson, T. bs Sa n the h of : e, SO recto te sahbdyosmraeg it will certainly destroy red | 00 the 10th Ft February. couraged dryness, . iesoipallng, & Setaraeeal . Vilmorin, 2. It is pion of the Lords, in reply to Her Majesty’s speech, will be moved by Lord and seconded by Lord Lurgan.—The death of M.P. East Surrey, has —— a va- Capt. Alsager, cancy, for which wie Antrobus, son of Sir E. A e forward has com on the Conservative interest ; and Mr. ac | Lapent, a partner in an East Tntia house in the eCity the Ministerial candidate. —Mr. D y has an: ced his nor, for the representation of Reigate.—Mr. Octavias Mor- gan has declared himself a candidate imn ‘ 58 THE GARDENERS’ ees [N° 4 which occupies nearly the whole of one side of the pieces. the four rpenny pieces, under whic ch On the obverse is a figure of Brit tannia, similar to those is h grenys - bay | ras to ron ample a in - "the en on the Ist of July nex made for taking = number of persons who i a June. This will happea 0 edral Choire, ti is said to vi mplation a great increase in the efctive yee of tha se of cathedrals. _AtW be the eee men in 0 be pie number ; so that, ineluing the 43, moe “will be eb oir ahr ae eae ea stre! oa by no adequate, it pears, rie e full effect 9 the ‘sublime ghusic wpe th d i ffi ina ma not agony St its pee and purpose It i pe that the on this subject are well founted, Id any important aie eof improvement i in our d to lead the way still greater improvements over the whole kingdom. © Singngschoo for Si Sor —Many distinguished | pers: been convince! of the advantage of culti- Paris, however, it will be at least 3,000,000 f.; thus the cost for 100 forts would be 300,000, 00 f. 20 detached for g of a “of 630,0 we ong sane of peace, and the ny tanlers sage of the value of | land adjoining th hus exceeding by 19 90,186,1 expenses of the Ministers of Justice, eb Alte ublic Ea eapcnng apse Agra ys e, and | o orks, sual, “yr 88 f. the budget and nenlgerkione ar tye persons residing near. Towards two a.m., however, ‘alm: sustained ood carried carried away rs the whole of the rich sil. from the ing " surface along w th the growi crops. oi Pett and “rushing with | great power to ea of 2 > - RE ar ORS ae gk <_ ais canlea ‘* monkey-boats,” large numbers of which were satan off the different wharfs 2 abutting o: and cautioned them to be o h. The lower part of the houses in Blackheath-road were cotnghettey aaa Two very strong bridges, to which were at- tached i in floodgates, gave way, and portions of eac e cart: n the canal, wnt Sond “their own security. progre eget Hartge a few isinutés belore four a load noise was, heard towards - north lost no in the at that moment ‘it is impossible to deseri yensing trough Lee to Eltham, &c., were axletree Seen | of a mile. The greater part of | mates of | the to prevent the spread of the diseas sgl y of London.—By the ble of mortality for ding Saturday the oth, it > eee that the “deaths from all causes bake one go ee ot water ues. Sonora Hanwell, an island laid out for a garden has ane te n i fear bell at Hackney “ the body of H. Davey, a 16 months. The serva that on Saturday they sat down to dinner, eons in all directions for =a of shelter. when it becam ae black i in the were running in very short time all the houses e put a portion of it into its mouth, and had har. face, and C. oriaies to the Seca oF enue ware of 207. a By sc d th jout ie “be, established in Spitalfields. co-operation of the ren and ji jou neymen to pro- hool of design. The Government the venting the action of that organ, and ee arres' erdict, ‘ ‘ocation.’’ | by p patting ng the child on the back, but did not succeed. _ A | had promised their “assistance, _Provided such union took | child was black in the face and He endeavoured to facturers and journeymen. A conversation ensued as to pass a probang into the throat, but a a resisting substanc es i him. He Id f forming h I, in the course of which the manu- considered the child irrecoverably dead. knowled caused by the bit of mutton lodging in the cuales pre- | men for their establishment of suchan exertions in object ; and it was a eat the funds for poate granted by the cou ylig : in the act of swallowing animal food, that within a clearly i bridge were found five i Tuesday | large barges, driven of ‘the water against the | evening an inquest was held at Charing-cross Hospital on wharf of Mr. Fowler, and swamped. They were laden a eg? Sy rast hen A ae aaa mittee, consisting of manufacturers and j journeymen, be with 1 of d 350 quarters of linseed. | under circumstances :—W. Harriott stated formed to carry the object into effect.” Ni f th tlet t Thames the greatest | that on Monday evening he and deceased were i a ze k At oth ts of th 1 f Savoy-street, when the ; sud- rae: ral barges and lig! have foundered, and y have | denly ran back. Deceased got out of the cart to lay hold - k. The ba: Sunaia wreak eGaaaies abate Sehgal of the horse’s Saeki i ile’ doi the The late Floods.—We learn from Essex that the inut- one of the persons on board, named about 17 | anix d to fi back, and d d of the Lea has considerable damage years of age, was picked up, jammed the rails at | violently j: a wall. the Soe ee ee During the neg [ee yard. It has been as-| unfortunate recei injury, wit: icked | the whole of Monday this district, to the dist: of eertained t 21 and escaped | him up and assisted in laying him on some straw in the | six miles in length, ing into Epping Forest, was one - from off Te thcsanenee both "we thoy pansade ia Salk. oF ain stable. He appeared to be dreadfully red, and f water; the in many parts, where the land - ‘Duke of — —— d’s grounds. ee Charing-cross Hospital. The house sur- e > d go bop ting up and going into the road to ascertain the cause, Lenin ory yup in the snow close to his Park-buildings, and evidently in a dying who saw a | Tonge treme” assistance 5 bat they were enable tn stem the forse. <6 0) a the was very ae nine eet ~JaNn. 23.] THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 61 mee P —In the West of England bh and the cler gyman was oblig ape residence to sh his dates the effects of the consequence have been still more disastrous, q * ec psa of food. He observed that there was but a very | mall quantity of food in the stomach, and the case was A verdict highway ay ri obbery, ac- ened with gr has aa committed in the neigh- ss of Mr. Coupe, of Haigh, after spend- ra hoped that his ultimate recovery may be effected. An inquest was held on hth | wet when a verdict of ** Accidental death ’’ rned.—An act of incen- jarism has been Srintnittesd oe a ag of 3 = Evans, eae Carmarthen, by which ten stacks of co and one The Swansea papers gre a ircumstance of a epics na-~ ing the evening with a few friends in ei le ce ween 12 an cloc! every mile large. additions to its bulk. Few villages on ee. Plain escaped.—In the North the dam ore consider: able : we learn from Sunderland, that — Wd t inhahit. +t + + of that port had never sustained, by river floods, damage Taste for egy deprived of F sensibility by = tatagons “tking vage ma and ey breaking of the i ice ‘in the river Borhen’ _ The main body m in be _mos' n the hea face. recoveri wae Coupe geal 5 Ohad vered i a man who eabelt 2 him to the ge ouse. Here it was haps four on the 19th, beating has befor it, driving om their moorings, and tn som with their clothes, saturated with ass Pa upwards of 100 sail of img : several steam boats, innumerable keels and other small craft, with rafts of timber. sceiie e which presented itself bs "daybreak was fi : , bow- ces to rigging, s many in pective ronan ey ssing, b number cannot be scurately decemna Toes ted. One glance assure Mr. Coupe that | Me ton saw before noe the pasted with whom he had so shortly before been ei d the bark Armata, Captain Jackson, which ; eaibe y at brad port ie mith igen kan lying =. pe eS e Cuba. A swarm ook p of the berths in the tia, wa Y built pert oof , The Captain fed ager regularly tee — any hu sites dm 8, aches sea wea eek boomy he a strong gal i sad Ge coming hog haw left the ship. The hone cyeomb nay still be seen on board the ship, j in the state the bees ouse, it was caused by the sy fires. Shortly after ope the smoke increasin; was given, a alg eward discove'! the dinin; making eae ne in Suffolk, the flood hina higher than it has been for last ten n years. Fears entertained at Sudbury i nd "ths streets were the for = | 3 impass Mid gat: and the first floors o f several kee eee oe current passing greibrt fg Ga sages in’ nto the sitet, York.. h "Phillimore as his commissary, a tne pe resources of the Minster, and how of ‘that | An assisted | by Dr. ose of far they may be made a 9s for the restoration : edifice ce. Another ts apts the gi il it is said, to such an extent +h th as to > impede prog a f+h which it is the province to pol The a of York has great opposition to these proceedings, and has strongly objected to Dr. Phillimo ore sitting as judge ina of the Coulee Liv ree- Trader.—At the hen? house am offi ers of ¢ cu 1 heeded to press a f hav- g landed a gant “of pe towns ak wens against nat the wife gentl of a tances | in this on As oists i su eded i i some of the in- | Mr. and Mrs. H. Hobhouse phar over “the di diiiap-inadiek oh fh bor bog by the noise, came to his aid, | were poh at the on and the carpet singed. iS sécu His hat was then examined, Bath.—A society has lately been formed here for provid- sr proved to ‘be that of Mr. Coupe, the — having | i been out subsequent to the robbery. e prisoner city, and for facilitating att gradual absorption ‘into other thew a handkerchief into the fire which he hed Bets er branches of honest industry of such of them as will be thro rown out of their employ = the Climbing Boys’ Act of amaged, and identified by Mr. Coupe ars f Parliament. The prisoner mates deg as a person of — racter, Bristol_—The _ discussion soning Mr. Brind! a native of Wigan, nai Bolton. On renee was | Mr. Owen, in the presence of ie 2 up before the sitting magi strates, who, after hear- | 4000 persons Doge been brought toa clot, snd resolutions ing the eviden: s h been g Socialis a system of sm t nied the th nsibility of man for his actions; that, by —— on the sacred institution of marriage, it tended to degrade the sex ; and that itaimed at se ene a all institutions. carried ami lady motion was d plaudits, only five or trate es tendered prot of ner i hand Didone bdlistgaguatete cer of the pollens that. A aly het he| Pi —A court-martial was as ta Dart the Revels arrived from Havre; a lady | George Hobbs, the gunner of the Pigeon packet, w with her servant was in the act of landing, but having | arraigned on charges :—Ist, being drunk and dis- her pearance, witness asked if she had any | orderly ; 2ndly, repeated drunkenness ; 3rdly, for insub- foreign on her person. She said she had not. Wit- | ordination and disobedience of rs; and 4thly, for ness then sent her, in charge of another officer, to the | striking his ior officer, the master of the Pigeon, Custom-house, for examination by the female searcher, | while in the execution of his duty. The se pleaded In th I guilty “a all th —— The court de ly six dozen and five es. near ts re-opening the J uge- Advocate read his sentiments as ive pairs of of and oj e ; i teRvehtea - or Sak de eilecs etined tn. | Se The searcher doped to ‘the “ing of the ne iene the ¢ charges, snd pronounced the r Guilty.” conform his jurisdiction, or to attend the Chapter, and t the lady, who too . out her | He was : enced to be hung at the yard~ one of Dr. Phillimore has gi ais shall compel his | PUTSe, and told her she would give anything not to lose | Hi doors sshipsin Hamoaze. The prisoner expressed ciee m has not been held for the goods. _She left o roa r being searched, saying | a hope that in consideration of his oe crave and its ES 1} she she had done.—The full | beg his = pata , the court would recommend him to ret eS 3 aaa beak amen of 29]. 13s., tetas hen. Gan the value of the Rear-Admiral Warren, said the necekaa in me qeatures doek Galen ry the uris- | 80048, erga until payment, was i 4 arf sieneencs a theie tive, but that they diction, i wag dap says, ded a by the Stafford. meeting has been held here to esta-| would recommend him to m sis Bee Pen authority of primi church, enforced by the canon | Dlish a county associa’ ting the moral and| Leeds.—The great meeting , tists, urts of common law in Eng- mprovement of barge: d boatmen. The | for which have been so long in progress, rs beet i t in the | Chair was taken by the Bishop of Lichfield, who advocated | place on The me was addressed rte diocese. “fe ange V. Ha cet tei announced | the claims of the society, pointi out demoralised adinea At Meek is dances r G. that t pearance for the restoration of the ag meray the necessity of using every Th Crawford, Mr. amounted tou pwards of 13,0007., of which 1200/. have effort their instruction. His lordship urged the im- Wiliams MP. Co ae ompson, and ype and 125, 0007. were requ uired. The portance of petitions from magistrates, ome! id suffrage, ‘Parliaments, and € the Mi Eh a pantie | manufacturers, and others, as ell as | the hecemsdcotr aap uttention At least 8000 persons were an Oe cdllee fs armel lg f saat oe be: Manchester—Starvation—An inquest, exciting con siderable ee gm interest, has been held at ean re- Birmingham Association was adopted, | seg a hs Ee rein os ‘coutionaea that a pete from 300 boat had part gomiit powerful effect in the House of Lords. recone’ GF sc thera Salk Raid Hrathertone resolutions to the same effect were carried. _, Dover. —A fatal accident has occurred to the the county constabulary Thursday morning, whilst passing through Heywood, his attention sus attracted’ by the aries of-chil- dren proceeding from a cellar. aving called a mother what was t the reason he did consequently, gave him 12s. peg and from that a d ne Mr. Leech eign, who had that the child had died of i 62 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [Ne 4 meg 2 was therefore retu' pa a ** Accidental death.”’ was committed o —A r Mess Lev and Goldsmidt, rd sewers stolen there- of ea oft o the amouot Ss was cut ge f and th diseety Ban ach through rs aperture. Railroads.—Midland Counties —On Sat ibe lay night oue of the bridges crossing this line near Leicester fell in, train rao Derby, and obstructed the traffic. after day in the shop of | o! 01 a be avagely treated. From every part of the barony hvilly almost daily accounts of outrages ae m persons and pro) are received.—Last week black lists were posted up in the barony, containing the names of the electors who voted at the late election against the vernment candidate, and calling on the people to mark , and dis of the traitors that voted against their clergy. Copies of lists forwai to Carlow, i i of e mail arriving soon the sechhent: was se seanvae a peculiar and grin duties, they are ors a to solicit terpos osition of her Majes " t is un the immediate i s Gove const it site e Ch burch’s friends on Side brai Ls of the contro oversy, all o m must join w ea! the fallen materials, but none of the passeng received | | ceeding to te, chapel of Tullow, he was met at the gate | | inst the recent outrage that has injury. After a detention of four hours, de prot ruction | by a mob, a eatened with death if he entered oe inflicted on the Choreh’ s liberties ; and that, both for the was removed, and the —_ — ts jo umey, arriving | chapel. aye were shut against him, and he was | encouragement of their suffering brethren in the north, Beas _/bnother toppage oc- pars er from the place. They next entered the chapel, | and for the Christian usefulness of the Church herself— mn Sun day ni; iit = d dragged out his brother, and ordere A him to be off, | seeing that if she lie A seni ate in the sacred duty of ordi- rong eau thaw on preter ag me pene of th d be excom “ € Soar, near ughborough, nee overflowed, and a body of water tra that pra at ig tm ing at that place to such aheight as the s! n-Koepes with his fam amily te remove Pre see At cope: Sanday night, the found chet pdeacy rails had been carried away, — pos ie sages chee: oceed no further. A chaise and four | ely procured, in which the bags were cop- mu unicated, a “and placed beyond the pale of civilised life. The Daw: under the moe | of effecting their pe d fivin in lawless mob that were instigated to the committal of these outrages. O’Connell’s Progress. —This gentleman arrived | on of all moral w great and oily ¥ Head, or to i an instrument of vet the people. Hight Court of Justiciary.—Alex r M‘Rae was charge ed with assaulting May, or Macey _M rei of the mails. On rect Cc agen des ich had for the former to orses was upset, but there were no gers. it is said that for several years the roads have fot been so much obstructed as they were during the past week. The snow fell | heavily i in the pio ; Saturday night in consequence of the re gale, that next morning the whole _ snow ha ad disappeared. t itl the Alon The d, and sun evince wi ith him on the repea al ques' that they are 1, bs h * Pt tk ah hie : gentleman, valievine it to be of Ireland.—On Monday. pre- o Mr. Q’ bei gel BS o he Operatives and “by the Giristan spe log evening, a public i plaae a are calculated to Mr. O’Connell’s iach was received | athusiasm j ; it contained an outline of his po- other streams, were stri rikin ng, m thes rs having overfowed ge “banks, Bove “iowa large Fie of ice We rd of any da- oan ‘ring F thts ase hs Accoun ts from Glasgow state the thaw was vei that pe the river, the lower parts of the city would be in danger m the flood, and fears were also entertained for the mee of the shipping i in the rae prudential meas were therefore ai adopted by e parties concerned. et 1,549/, ; Trish ; London and Crna 22s Eastern | H Counties, h Mid- on the 10th fraud neo xy errondoend no- ee Sohge pgs vat for nen gable part bers of the House of Com pling —On Tuesday the R Raeat Meeting m was held is of the ge ois and cant a attended 1 persons pode there having been several heavy showers pe ay it satu night, a spate was aga ety eT fragments of ic down at a moderat y. The eu hee severe, steamers and a schoont bout an hour and embodied wei ich he p rofessed, the { vars ie an imposition pasties ie preci ty and force, and based u: upon injustice. He urged the ine =e shed the weir but, despite every Pn egal oorings. A alf sufficed to clear ptep river << the ice, bac aa is said at the rate of s IRELAND. Manufactures.—A. meeting was in Deas a Be ee purpose sth rding ep acciyale dent & a ag mam ebaees 0 rticles of Of ladies were presen, and ¢ conducted wit ind jiving the preference bed the worse dearer the pri and better Ch iageris ga war Onaga -d Kon free Three cheers re atte cheng Pres! r of State for the Home T pepenanat an ncryeats j protest against th g ee the Rev. Mr. ae dh Minister of that hat the city $ appre- . & 8. = B 2 eS a a z SESPRREEE SS JAN. 23.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 63 as a coup d de théétre. Schiller’s ‘‘ Ode to Joy,’’ by eethoven, was more coolly pest 0 but the ensemble of | sed the concert oa og was d with t in an enthusiastic spirit, crowne si crow i — is HaYMARKET.— —Ana attempt has b een ee tise Mrs. Trollope’ s novel of Widow Barnaby at this theatre. The wi was d to - Glover ; the sham Maton wi Me Valet, to Messrs. Vining and Wrench. The wor ost serious cara cocuhd changed, characte ters walked on a ; yet was there scarcely an nyth = e qa baa Fi solemnity until to- rs. 1 ase pursuit of prey or | i the demand. Mr. Taylor was, therefore, obliged to absent of every living creature which comes in its ‘way. The ordinary length is s4t 0 5 fee } mself from his residence within bie La Bd nda as, in the event ps Sa being taken dao custody, he tead of & he usual numb I 1 of young, it conta’ athe g ‘on laa opene no less than 162 young ones. At the time of parturition, the young are fully form ed, active, and rea yy to ite. where they live sr on rats and birds; “but | the loftiest Gaal and io ummit of the most arid mountai hg rivers, an, wards the ae voked a i rg the phen was of a nature to repress There was a time, indeed, when hat was ay oe last scene, the er m Mrs. Bar- naby was broug the swind ane continually called out, se at in gre ‘ cies sion of opinion was uttered d ece, but the hisses gained foree by retention, sak at the ar 29 rand vi be observed, that Me WwW hae 8 + regular season Scieekd ‘Tast h d Chamberlain has given him leave to and Monday was the first night of tly i pted tl ‘ Me the hie 1 te ADELPHI. he 3 ew Lg pe Ce alled Agnes St. a ll’s wt ubin, 3 and s irr itati +8 eaiially visited by them in following the instinct of their energ etic na ature. Mo founded upon one of M pees Trials,’’ was produced on Thur: Mr. and Mrs bier and Mrs. heuer, ss the : principal ars the ce was successful, and w ced for tion.. Faiscellan David's Sow.—The common ane ression “ pot David’s Sow,”’ is said to have Fey phe in the following David Lloyd, a Welshman, who kept a public-house at Hereford, had a ene sow with six Saas which was mu uch v isited by the rious He had a wife too in the fi to palates the. goodness and potency of her "eabend equenre t tion. » David’s wife ag indulged her pro- pensit little too and being fearful of consequences, cong t it best t to er timely retirement : with this view, she turned out the sow from her habitation, k possession of the sty, whe sleep self A com pany of persons coming soon after wards to sty, ‘caclsimlog joyously, on approaching the inclosure, ina ere’s a sow for moe ! —_ either of you ever see such other?’’ To which s of the pet in advance, see ee the. state the woman was in, replied, “It is truly the most drunken sow we ever beheld.” |, Whe ence the woman was ever after called ‘‘ David’s Sow Mec Pretiy Pig and Elderberry Wine.—Some fam left home to pick hops. pe pig, which was in stolen in ab: ce a- of hie hou: end some stairs which led up to the itehen, and oie er pee himself there, he inspected the cupboard : in that he found about two pounds of bac con, which, in a most paren agar manner, he devoured. eae him Y ps stairs ss a ae TOON: There he bu he lpes himself sy be as pacer as any bon- i arish. But 8 freak now drew to a close; poor ot ** capered about, threw ‘aeten, the ber upset a certain utensil, broke th we sh-hand basin, and swallowed the © soap. _ This la st per- mall. Having hitherto been only found in the islands RA Martinique, St. Lucia, one the smaller one of Beconia ; appea rs to be 0 fo oundation for the tradition > ide c th Univ ersten, joving “the e privilege to a greater extent —e = ri as possessed by bo! from rss continent of South A drift-woed is found i in the West Tae. that hitherto i is provident ed by a rom of boa. cca 5 = en by the inhabitants to vid the island of So dr eadful scourge, aimed aright to exercise judicial authority. Wishing, however, to release erent es from the necessity of claiming conusance, d to enlarge and fortify ae her pee which they possessed, they adopted the atari cou eding, in order to save themselves the necessity of pe meg urse to the temporal courts at a _He (Sir F. Pollock}. phone contended, that if they are to enjoy the privilege, they must enjoy it with the ac- compa! convenience, and wi difficulty which at- a the establishment of oe ri - ae Justic Agree gpm the c crop season. Amongst others the falco serpentarius ociaral bird of the Cape of Good Hope, a remarkable of the captorial family o of birds, whi ch liv e pri rinci- you mean to contend t F. Pollock said, that where ‘the University had ee a con- x th y to ‘Rated but we have not beard what success has attended its introduction.—S. E Baron Von Hi riage.—The follo ing account of the success of t Ei "aren! s aniiaioial advertisement, which appeared in our first number, ma has led to the most happy results. Parr without ajoke, met with a perfect woman. punctuality ona delicacy, he is no ring, ind at rest, a circular letter to those condescending young | have offered to surrender their hands and hearts, and all their charms, amoun i. o no fewer than 749. The gallant gentleman, who is aor foe regrets that the term own letter and his in ad sense of delicacy will. ve allow him a we the 749 letters he has received. So’ ft e says, are so nee mposed, that if sipoeed oe "the light $ day, ey would in one week extinguish by their brilliancy the celebrated Baibice) cites ce of Madame de Sevi; arery render it stale and Sapuesapie. The most t spiritueltes, he — s, as might be expected, came from France. There 7 from actresses, were sng mantua-makers, - countesses, cae getty cco iterary — re names are always men bey ise Bar ron, however, to his a-mi tione prevent the poasibility y g r ,, has announced throug me press that he has burnt all these erfum: ae salgelver. The letter he is preparing will be hi and ay public, aguas he declare page o the wor rid, but s devot ed t e om adieu he oA ec no long: o oO aci me in this spevier . writ to prohibit Faby Chancellor, his assessor, wae was pi oaabes daring shack f the stated, the. byieo pret of - - ap ould carry t! the pro the apron A into Raton —Sir F. Pollock said, that tit was very excess of jurisdiction which rendered the interposition fie possible that, after this in the course which en entered w He thought it likely that the Duke cf Wellington himself had never heard of case.—Sir F, Pollock expressed hig’own impression to be to ce ab me effect. He had been, ho T the ne vy, og pense er, -—Mr. Justice lined, hov aioe sh ae declaring it to bea matter of gio gil an treasure of b to him. o | Cov ¥ QUEEN vy. one ; ¢. Mtn kngton, Chancellor pe vhe pieeint va Orford lock pe on Tuesday, on the part of an attorney walled Philp Taptor, poe deed of A ag nce sie to edit bo og igen defendant fro! which n nhis court against the ing a pec against T Galle, Eatery Aen "apolieant to enforce the recovery of the : nd w his poating snout all over sous re ae master’ “enight: for the benefit of the air, and t o find his wat y out again. Being observed by some one, . great vecgee was raised, and a report basses spread, that ¢ ther € was amad pig, foaming at the m G street: andthe — — by all — certainly had a very queer look. e was ae to shoot him, to prevent further mischief; but 0 and con, one to an, more resolute y went up st P poor into a uy him harmlessly down stairs. A subsequent nace ion of the premises, and de} tions mitted therein, by satisfactorily — the adventurer’s Ss awful appe since, oe safely deposited i in his ie k any further dail ~ lité nda, . r-de-Lance Snake of pea saad ae a ck The —The French papers give an account of a 2 melancholy accident whieh lately be g t. Pierre in Martini is = I i mae h, a fF in shootin he wae ed by a sks, ant notwithstanding the most cbstnate resistance, he was bitten in = ie ercise of ‘the gen functions of the Chancellor, and which, as was designat m the Mr. Bourke, both upon tay Parneonne Mr. Taylor, ‘ellington several places i in the rare The reptile to which this fatalaccident is due, is the an: matical te eb ry Renee 7 Pat Ge thameani teh poiso a e most sath ci syecteson tabs ee n is ie powerful with that of the rattlesnake ; but, unlike nike a most other of the more deadly sorts ; soee Leader authority of the Duke of W ted against 1 their bodies ‘whenever h ir F. Pollock) had, ‘ot to submit and fit only to be decided by uct full atic 4 whi ch his "Lordehip accordingly referred it.—On Wedne Pollock renewed in full Court the motion which he no a = the Pee ious 4 fora writ of _ He tion; the learned counsel tulated the fact of the and the Court granted the and d Birmi ingham Leo to remove ae this” ee The late Accident on the Sir W. Follett applied for. a bao the Coro: isi London writ of money, and that Taylor, in his char. an attorney, pro- | own oe They ali the engine was moving to the pri gh sue a writ inst Mr. Bomke, who, relying mea the death of the deceased, and levied a deodand of 2000/. upon the privileges which he believed himself to possess, under the ju- | engine. The learned counsel said there were several objections Gicial constitution of the University, enced a suit in the | to the inquisition on the face of it. The t rant Chancellor’s Court against Taylor, for having violated those | that the jury, — found that a felony had in two cases privi by suing the writ. The citation from the Chancellor’s | committed, could n erwards find that, as in of accident, was issued in the name of the Duke of had rhe and | the engi peer to the death of the deceased. It had been was directed to the Yeoman Bedel aig Law, comma’ m to } laid dow e’s Institutes, and other authorities at no — Mr. Taylor to appear in the accustomed plac sig ex- dan Pow a Coroner’s jury except where the death of the used by accident. In cases of the death —_— cites + ieee it was well known that the by ir FP, ated by some cabalistical y tie, bet ne os called the be Adyterit teriam or A) ef am, or something se ar few was committed had begin es all his which he (Sir F. Pi eK was unable ely to pronounce. paar id no deodand could thereby be levied on The citation vated: that the object of procuring Mr.Taylor’s at- oa objection was that there no dance at the Ch: 's Co , that he should answe in the -eiinretanp of the time or Lyre en and where, the tain interrogatories w. w ere to be addressed to him, | deaths of the deceased took place. There were several other touching the health’of his soul, and the poi hag correc- poe gence byrne —. Sod ~~ Best inn eB necessary to trouble tion ot his morals and excesses, and that the es and interro- ‘ourt at pre . gatories were to be presented on the part of Mr. Bourke, against | The Ship Drpat.~ —The Fi oib ae Wallace.—Mr. Justice Wi wh the writ had been sued out the Queen’s Bench, con- | said, that he understood on Saturday that in ie ae hag trary, as the citation alleged, to the status in that case made ere wiilin the prisone joi provided. Thecitation concluded by informing Mr. Taylor, that | sessions of the Central Criminal Court.—The ae if he should not aj in Court directed, the Chancellor | said, the p: utors would ct iniy be ready pert e would determine the matter, notwith: ing his abse::ce, which by that time.—Mr. Justice Williams thea inquired whe oA the Court would pi 3 he consequence of Lontumacy. | the prosecutors would undertake to have the gy ie bape Sir F. Pollock said, that he never before heard of such a SS ‘ore a magistrate, and the ne ia vig a eee wate as that which had nm issued in the cireamstances, or of the | proper and legal form ; and that being don ee a ri sig nia — a power as the Ch or professed to exercise | either be committed for trial or to = as the it rate, in the sion. He observed Mr. Taylor bad refused to | his diseretion, think proper ?—A\ nai ce me page e- seur ike citation, as, by submitting to appear in the Court, he | tween the learned counsel, it was : eed se he priso ant would have acknowledged the legality of a jurisdiction We \ ewe Se ee tsi age Bim egg ani ete iene extraordinary that ever exercised. mt reduced writin ° u —Mr. day after that appoi for the hearing, a decree made | Justice Williams said, be was v: — re poem come to that defendant in 2, Ceincaears Court should, iehre the 2d = sie mance a = amp? his san 0 ia : © of rch, stop all proceedings which he had takea as Lome ‘gant og es ic : ne deposi ange bon ie plaintiff in the Court of Queen’s Bench, pay the | against rere take » f i costs of eedings ae Chan: “4 : : of costs was made up seme da ywever, what his Kordshi had said, it would be i hatha Lovaibip had ao woul oa cmoanarnane 64 City cf Londen. His Lordship’s observati ‘ould be reported to saad es by the City solicitor, ae rhe h had no doubt that it wo be immediately discontinued.—The prisoners were then phat trim Linhility to Rates. — The Que eppard.— Sealer of Wakenelt in respect we hou pied iby —— bi the gaol, and ma t of nest also, being as Ieeies evident that in which he was, he mage be The selicitor said t! ingly gestion pt frees io attended to, Gvinpaate. ey esse: Of Felony — Wiliam Latham, a manu- facturer from Halifax, was charged with uttering a forged bill of exchange for 1752, to Messts —— and cy ae of Wood- street the clerk to complainants 5 an old w uainted wich} bis tool He had e args prerertg for 1752., drawn by prisoner atten. — — came due, itwas presented at ’s, od eae s havi orders to pay. The prisoner the time ind pees ‘0 the RENEE Mr. Lloyd, solicitor, said rise orged sai e acceptance. the omg eet oner had for Upon bil, PE a -eedings were taken 4; it the pertain dg 10mm gre had denied that the accept. ar 0 lette ace, not as per aes he to hold the pri- could be tones to London to give evi- isoner had a large conce: mimitted any forgery. e on, b was written iS aa! He S$ cousil Bane —— Seta 2 oO swear the: @f complainay stating that the came to town to ask a ite forbearance from his creditors ; aud the solicitor, onthe part of . Leaf, had called on him to sign Pecunia asada cae effects for equal of his erediters,on pain of being | prosecuted on charge ; that his cHeatretused to sign without ng his legal advisers, as he had. 4¢00f. in stock, imicies oa boek-debts and credit at a joint: eck bank. : solicitor w pen re to follow him, led him towards the. d gave him into custody. Alderman Farebrother asked Tiape ie ails Wee. toe; a ae would not, any more himself, tolerate such it and retended to have been established in he of 1,000,000/., and here it ended, with all ving really existed no more than nide to the public ; eas was Mayor, in order ~ piechene the press, the he ublici Sir Peter Laurie said, that i cases of plunder er would be mentioned at ouse, He anderstood that the chief actors in the business had betaken eorseab: o the Continent. He again re- it with them, but he nh wa : mi! moned by the paris! they sede bet refused to suppo the first, and diagtiter:to deer of os ‘second defe: ni. — had become chargeable to that paris The relieving that Mrs. Hazel was deserted = ‘her husband, ee: in = Ocreber last was admitted, with her child, into the workhouse. Mr. Hazel, wards monses t. wa to support his daughter w-s admitted ; the magistrate tl dismissed the summens against bim, and procee against the other defendant. The solicitor for Hazel then stated that he opposed t the demand upon bis clien! ground that a person was pot liable in law to support *his daughter-in-law. By the act of Elizabeth, the yr eke after husbands, was con- fined to relations in blood, and did not extend to relations i in eae a which situation his client stood in the e present ca The said that thi of the law supe oo aemesntig ot who n fii c three houses, and, from external believed him to be quite capable of supporticg the child. The magistrate therefore directed an — to be made ohne the finn ant Hazel for the payment . 6d. a week for the chi'd’s aloged — ide—Mary Watson, aged 19, was charged with having cealed the birth of her newly-born ore ect and oie co its death. The alleged offence dato 7 na De- since wi which time the p infirmary i ys being removed, ned ; no! p him ly ying on its face A coroner’s inquest was held on the child soon brea its death, at which a herr = “ twiths anding w trao alive, but e body of the inepesal 3 blood was in issuing from - ance and nose, , and it had sotto omens tage rhs He rved c oe perabsitas ayrry oat vei baie pe an matems t rs Tate sa at there oe aera a novel o Po then dir nesses to be taken down, cetera ontusio' o its right tem ad bee mi made tos stra ected mittal on the omte of murder. €, and also on ore er be committed hen wilfal forse si 4 or discharged. rate vidence of Wo risoner’s wards dreds aga slant Sp L’S.—Tuer TERSAL! Rspa of 3 am oat $s laid out upon Pa’ teemon at 15 to ed (in one qua arter oaly) O1 offer against the Kovght or the Whietie whose ae were un- commonly shy. and to take 30 to! mere nes t he seat er respec 's bus Offers to back the latter against M other ects the afte: S$ dull ai ing :— ER 4to 1 ag Scott’s lot (taken "8 to 1— Wahab. and aft. offered.) 35 to 1 — Duke of Welling. 10ec0 to 8— Ld. Stradbroke’s ton (taken,) jot (taken.) 40 to 1— The Nob. to 1—Palzmon (taken.) {2000 to 20 — Mustapha (taken 18 to 1— Rosalie ct. (offers and aft. red.) to take.20 to 1.) 0 to 1% — Sno bety eee < 18 to 1—Eringo (offers to oe to 300 — Ralph, take 20 to 1.) ned elguee rote 22 to 1— Coronation (offers Whistle Nope to take 23 to 1.) 700 to 50 — dances 28 to 1 — Knig ae of the es eheabidge Wh is e. wes a2. GAZETTE OF THE WEEK. # DECLARATION OF INSOLVENCY.—J. Aprpieton, iron Bers oun ANKRU. ES ANNULLED.—J. Tayton, of Portway Road, nmesbury, Staffordshire, iron gegen COCKHILt, Y of AL mondbury, Yorkshire, shopkeeper. BANKRUPTS.—E. V. acral { the Britannia, Hackney, icensed victualler, -—H. Josern, of Soho re, artists’ colour- man.—W. Bow tes and J.C. Bow:ss, of 25, Stor t, Bedford Square, 58, be ee Coram Street, Russel Square, and 59, Brook Street, Grosve' meets anh upholders.— 9 ALE, Of 12, Mat shall Street, Go n Squ ee o — = of Court, Drury one victualler.—A. Orr nd W. —E. arshal Soult, © wher Phe ow pee nae =, ee PEN bee of are ell Street, Goodwins Fields ber mere - LEA E. ehant.—J. Patesxsox, W- Rops, and J. “H. Sr: and Glasgow, mone tare ont ure4rs.— Applegarth, Dum ness, near Airdrie, and late of Dalmacadder, Macpowatt, of Johnstone, TIONS.—J. Ratr —— deceased: ms a achine acca Birtus.—On the 15th inst., | "s-square stanley, ofa prt ni 12, at Pantie Dering, the Foot re e Lal g, of a son.—At Brad! — is Olney, Bucks, the Sophia Tower, of betas and hi Dscuces —On the 19th inst, at St. Paul’s, panera Rev. B.S. Ffinch, M.A., rector, H. D. Cormack, of Mam son of Mr. Corm: ack: New-cross, to. Martha, youngest danghtst ey.—At St. Ni of Mr, Tokely, Erith cottage, Hatcham, Sarr las, cha Smee by the Rev.T. A. Cooke, Mr. J. m, to Charlotte, fourth daughter square, Islingto: Bright rem i=} ae squ: ston rien Dover, on the 14th inst,, Printed by Messrs. BRAveury and Ev. Fleet-street, in the Precinct of Whitersars, Published by them at the Orrrcs, 3, C: County of don, and Covenr-Gaapen, in the tisements and Communications = —Lately, at Biddenden, aged 63, Mr. 40 = gardener at Iborndea: leaving at mstances.—On Higes, of of Gibsea- Mr. Shee the 20th inst., in nd ap lountees Bathurst, relic third oe Bathurst, in the 760.5 year of ber “oe —At Rive J. Phipps, Esq., aged 59. a Mater cae Sea £ s, S, Eombard-streety in vac City. eS ae PO ee rN eg a a es Iheeyonese ee THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. A STAMPED NEWSPAPER OF RURAL ECONOMY AND GENERAL NEWS. THE HORTICULTURAL PART EDITED BY PROFESSOR LINDLEY. No. 5. SATURDAY, JANUARY 30, 1841. PROSPECTUS OF Ton GARDENERS CHRONICLE; NEWS Th Professor Lindle; ardening is admitted to be better Sal in Gee Britain n any other country, and the mber of works on the desire there is Many thou- i Natu Sa — nine pence with Notices and Criticisms of peer OF peerage G OPERATIONS, givenin great detail, and japted ms as ai form a constant assist- ig mestic Correspondence mt wctfecta:— Reports of tho! orticultural Exhibitions ce) ; in mais = those interesting topics ae ee of mete and the == of the various pore: the création each on the other, will also form discussion. Another peculiar feature e will be the in troduct forma- tion relating to FORESTING, or ARBOR CULTURE This is one of the most important lie can be dir econd onl roduction of tim- whe well nates convey the earliest notices of the introauction of tal, as w new species, which promise to increase regimens get value ot woodland property.. When to pian pee ian ‘ato fell, ¥ WILL BE STATED WESKLY IN THE CALENDA HER WITH THE WEEKLY GaRpEN OPERATIONS, Alt h it is not in ed to oc r columns with the details of AGRICULTURE, yet as Gardening * ses eee of Farming, it would be ne even if it wi e, to ex- clude the general principles which relate tot henge roan 4 plants, whether aon a —— . asmallscale. Whatever, t — in that respect to the Farmer To ORIST our Mi: much interest, not only weekend oats aie beautiful pro- ductions which are his peculiar os wiil be constantly treated of im sach a manner as to make him thoroughly acquainted wi! the merits or demerits of new v odes of cuitivation, but . Weconsider it wnnec t head furthe thaa to say, that we do no nd to range o es under the banners of any party; 00 the contrary, our best endeav will be to e ONIC id nioss; our object bein e elucidation and discussion: of the laws of nature, not ofman. The reader wili thus be provided, in additionto the peculiar feature of the Journal, with such a v: of information concerning the-events of the day as will supersede the-necessity-of providing himself with any other Journal. pfoprittors are happ. py 4 announce Peta the ey have bower received prom of ions from great numbers of friends and sup} Ania se agresli om the following may be m wad Professo: eanee ams : « Daubény, of Oxford 'rofessor Henslow, of Cambri Professor Graham, Ed gh Is Sir W. J; Hookers ot Glasgow rofeszor Royle, of King’s College I The Hon. = Rv gre acer W. Herbert, Pt Barker, Esq., B: mingham Dean of M. H ic . EBsa., cretary of the | John Regen) mat D es turarSociety —~ | N. B. Ward, Esq. Me pst » Edinburgh } Paxton, Gardener to the Duke of Bohe Peogene to the Arch- | vonshirs Cate: ei , [Bedterd, r. M‘Intosh, Gardener to the Duke ae bay vecurd fo tie Duke of | ‘of Buccleugh Nooroaere — to the Duke =| tape 7. ener to the Duke of awa Gardener to the Duke | Mr. esol We son, Gardener to the fSuthé: > the Duke eae y estminater Me Coo re Ge vient ee Mr. Se = S Gardener to the Duke of ae eames rson, Gardener to the Earl = 5 Gear Mr. pete ih, G nee 3 fe Sous Gia De peat Mr.B - ee ener to ¢) East Mr. “Mic tens ra ee , Gardener to the Earl patang meie shi 3 Pg: Errington, Gardener to Sir P. | Mr. mee oh raps eg Mi Gardener to Sir C. Lem gic of the Botanic Garden at oe e mebts - es » of the Botanic Gard » Cw if hi ardor a bas aso > Botanie G HEARTSEASE. HENCHMAN begs sa aire Cultivators of the . Geel rand! that he can supply, from pots, twelve of his fin e SeEdlings (including Robin gabe priser were so very Bake last year, at 3/.3s. Also 25 good named varieties for exhibition for 17.—Edmonton, near London. san GILL, NURSERYMAN, BLANDFORD, begs to announce bi ve Growers of Dabiias, Seg] ed intends Age in May n Plants of his beautiful EDLIN Robsart cast. Coley blush white edge oe fe with purple, very high centre, throws itse i dand several extensive llc os nd com- petent re —Plants 10s. 6d. each. s Catalogue of all the leading Dahlias may be had on eppitest vials A fine healthy Stock ot Fruit and Forest Trees in 4 m pt high + sty vt Ry el caae Orders will receive the most pro! attent ndford, Dec. 1, 1840 Or-W ATER APPARATUS FOR Me erent HORTICULTURAL BUILDINGS, Zgets sma USE — oa MARYS ze the considera- the sent = dure is bend appara ratus with economy in the charge They reek whom, land, Scotland, and Ireland, for pointe no! Sores and have had the honour to be art by the ‘omtcutarel aoriety of London, in exeeuting the works of thei: lendid Conservatory, lately erected at Chis- wack D. and E. Barrey also construct in metal all descriptions Horticultural Buildings ntl Bas Sashes, and invite noblemen, ernie: men, and aa ren? to an inspection of their various drawin and mod els more ee ai th 7 ere lithe broke sees AIL rherises, and can refer to the Conservatory sttocuek 7 the Pantheon as one of their ‘rire, besides others in this cou and on the Continent.- HORTICULTURAL BUILDING AND HEATING BY HOT WATER. paratu: anufacturers, beg on of the Nobility, ace, and arenes ‘ises, where may be see prem! tural Works upon brates reper “s large | | be had and their sla seen at Mrs. Lawrence’ s, Ealing Pa Messrs. rson’s, Pine-apple Nursery, Edge e-Toad ; ae 4 Gaines’s ery, Battersea; Mr. Knight’s Nursery, Chelsea Mr. Catlengh’s Nursery, Chelsea; er, Esq., wer | Lodge, Windsor; Sir Edmund Ant — at their | Man nufactory, Glouce an place, Chelsea, near | joane-square. JHE EAT neta kobe =~ CONSERVA- TORY. Glazing I and beauty of ap- pearance are acknowledged ; and taving now undergone mc satisfactorily all to which every of a tesaye be ani sunjedt it, its success as an riment may be ed as complete. It has established its grea’ iority other ow in use, both as regards a a: transmissi safe fely pronounced to bean eaane of the most ese syst of Horticultural ame ports has yet been ov agparwce JOSEPH DRAKE, n-street,. St.. James’s, and road, Senos: ~ > wie the execution of th thaee was intrusted is honoured by his Grace the Duke peg in which it has as been pleased so successfully prt Pearce permission of Mr. Parton, under whose judicious manage: the works at the Conservatory were conducted, to make € culars which = frees be deemed desirable to obtain, cation by lett ae ceersapans gene i Ss BRITISH SHEET.GLASS for HORTICULTURAL PURPOS ‘OBLEMEN, eget and HORTICUL- , are ee ee eer t arena tae of. Prices, and ev pon tare the above article, which has been ad peas ig fally at Chatswort, upon application to J. DEARE, Plate and Crown Glass ‘arehouse, 8, Jermyn-street, St. James’s, and 100, apennia sends Orders. for r large quantities of Glass for Lights Houses accurately out: to the pore size, and punctually cae cane upon the lowest wholesale terms. Window Lead, ard Putty, Prepared Cement, and every requisite for Garden chester | Hu ORTIC TURAL SOCIETY OF LONDON, 21, Mr. Shepherd, of the Botanic Garden | Mr. Niven, of the Rege heer ie Feb. 1810.—MA Mr. Willincoogn, of the Botanic Gar. | ot DWARE “"PROLIE —This was ire nic aa Mr. Siaich € the Botanic G variet’ 01 Beaty oe re katie arcagga nso ~ Beaton, Ga: rto Sir W. Mid. | Mr Appt Brock vtec avery excellen' % ut Twslenen an on hake ee Siig | close to the bottom of the stem, very Mr. Mackay Tony a ong | Mr. ‘Menzies, of Hope Honse, near | clusters; aad bearly. @ fortnight ear ae Mr- Perrin, of Aighburzh got Voges Meoraers te pees ueing @& uc ee Amaten: “hai ia Me, Whitig, oe ee, highly deserving a alten meta | cour, irs, Nurserymen, Gardeners, and all other er persons in. he best early variety hit 5. —JORN | ht Baite cr ieultaral pursuits, aré invited ro favour the valuable Bean may be ee ‘ant Hor as ©arly as possible with communications upon subjects of ish to Protessivnal. sapeiee, Office, 3, Charl harles-street, collection Covent-Garden. M be ordered of all Ne Cape Broccoli, Price 6d. KERNAN begs to inform his Friends and the Pul blic, nat be will have ev — Novelty worthy bp roe nye in ad. dition - his already ch ssortment of FL ER and VEGE- TABLE SEEDS; Cataloguce of which may be rebel on application ; Iso Catalogues of Messrs. ers’s Roses, it Tri and popular Catalogue - dots and ~~ abs. ae Great Russell-s! t, Covent Garden, H° H ae a Meg NU — MEN, &e., CLAPTON, LONDON In submitting the annexed List rf public inspection, beg to state bet bat os they may be favoured with shall be promptly cane floribunda, 21s. to Soo Gloxinia rubra, dwarf, 638. ce ie acy Araucaria celsa, seedling Glox rubra, plants. 6 wo : inches shih, oa Goldtassia samen ES 10s. 6d. Azalea ca foliis * |B aon nbergia digitata, 10s. 6d. ea Manglesii, 15s. Georgeana, 2 Ee Mind ae inophylla, 31s. 6d. macrantha at 0 21s. coccinea, 19s, per doze! purpurea, 21s. Knightia ex 638. ear alba, 10s. 6d. urus tawa, 63s. bilis, rae henaultia—2 species from sor | Swan River, decidedly new, a, i. ‘e “to 2is. | and distinct ipers each other ; Banksia aitenata, 10s. 6d. one of them bed as ce- Te stial blue; Foor 21s, to 63s. poser hes ba. eac! Meonziesii, 42s. Lobel i: 2 some, occidentalis, 10 dw pecies, the Columnealon mt va emall; shaded, flowers blue, 21 42s Mahonia tenuifolia, 147s. Capra Harrisii, 21s. to 42s. Mirbelia dilatata, 10s. 6d. to 42s aoe cupressinum, small, at bilis, 63s.'to 105s. nana, IOs. | pry jee pteridifolia, 105s. | tation arborea, 158. to 31s. 6d. nervosa, 63s. opea specios' osissima, strong, rate s. 6d. | Zichya tricolor, 10s. 6d. OODED GREENHOUSE PLANTS. N° COLLECTIONS AS UNDER. 25 eee at od. each 5 ies at 2s. 6d. ea 25 1s. 6d. each 2 - 3s, 6d. each With many species of more pated e 5s, to Sis ‘CAMELLIAS. Fine ery esa irom 1 foot to x! hea high. Lg ips vari “to by nai oe ochroleuc ca, 78 6d. to 42s. Paxtonii, 63s. picturata, 7s. 6a. Whee n of England, varieties, as Dorse’ tt, imbricata, eximia, alba, sora $8. to pw ae ar Pena s. Gd. P b= Camelliacand! iaiietira, be: to2la. = Donkelaerii, a to 63s. | | i King, 7s. Landrethii, pa 6d. to 63s. 105s. dclicatiseimna, imbricata Chandlerii, Elphinstonii, ee Ke Fine Flowering Plants, ins six: Serts, 1s. per Dozen. ica Vv icosa su ats Bom yramidalis, 15s. per to 18s. per dezen — percnrens 158. per doz. gracilis vernalis; Gs. perdoz, irabilis, 15s. per doz. uscula; 12s. per doz. Toadbaahs 9s. per doz. PE ecto . per doz. mammosa, 9s. per doz. est per doz. | . per abietina, % The above all and may be had in collections as urider, or separately :— 24 dissi i for 18s. | 24 dissimilar varieties for 60s. 24 do. _ Sts. ft do. With about 25 otsesh nme 58. cy egg ear + H. L. and Co. can owi quantity :— Fabiana imbricata, 12s. per doz. , Lisianthus [ee 2s. Gd. Fuchsia fulgens, 95. per doz. | Hov oe to42s. per doz. | Stylidiamlaricifoliam,2sdeach “longifolia, 5s. each | graminifolium, 30s. per doz. Lechenaultia fof harm strong, Hi ciliatum, 5s. Sent out by 6s. per doz. t mistake as saxifragoides. GREENHOUSE CREEPERS. 25 Sorts, from. ts. 6d. t6 3s, BACEOUS PLANTS. Aletris far: - 6d. each Iris ape maces 2s. Gd. each re parsscerg igs. ae doz. | Lilin atrosanguineum, 3s. Gd. Anemone Apennina, per saan : doz. Thalictroides, 138. vitifolia. is. 6d. each Calo} Op OEORy. or Gene pul- cheney 158. Con ostylis am: ~ desi filiformis, 7s. 6d. each Se a ct | Pens es ae laceum, 7s. 6d. 6d. each Gentiana alpina, 2s. 6d. Sk ee each angustifolia, pape Rs _ fegeor sos 2s. ‘per ch Bina, 3s, ‘6d. each TING TREES in Sioa Wasps and Flies, —N. HULM¥, PARanise-Gaeen, pp ofacka és the following Articies> ures ering. ofvhree different’ textures, at Se. per square ual at 74. per: squaré yard; and WOULLEN %, of a stron ty, m yarn double 4, at ad. per G, of sifferent malar at 5d:, artivles vac y the: Nobi various parts of ee ington cea had the happiness togive No Patiexpa with con eee perzons MASTERS, from tte preceding. small, 36s; of larger gro growth, al. 2s. 6 sorts, hegp new Belgian varieties, at species, eke | ere oeteey 42s. each. Agepantius umbellatus, Is. 6d Bain 80S Is. 6d. albicans, 7S. Abutilon Steward, Sn Great Yarmouth, \ Norfolic . ‘ Strand, on the 21st inst., that an ELECTION of TWO PEN. | S: Palmer, Esq , ditto : e SIONERS will take place (agreeably to the rag of the Institu. | W- Garforth, Esq., Wiganthorpe, york” : é: tion) on THURSDAY, the 3rd i day of June next, at Oue o'clock | W-D- Palmer, Esq., Sbrubland-cotrage, Suffolk ft precisely,” at the Crown and chor Tavern tse. ). 2 Fe Gentry, and fers Frie: in general, that he has ange. | S. Grainger, Esq., Blackheath . ic g ‘ i ments tor co g business in Beverly as Geter i Nurse. m. Tiefield, Esq., Broseiy, Salop 2... r: ryman, nan, and Florist. A. L. takes this opportunity of . Potts, Esq., . do. oO. 4 is =. ree stating that he pty Opened a conn: with some of the first | John Negus, Esq., Crimplesham, Norfolk © . | houses in , through whom he will be | F- il, Esq., Weymouth . 2) Fs “Behe departments in suf. | T. R. Mar ushet, Kent)) 256 sine . Sebeee tae © rent season. A. L. trusts | B. Hicklin, Esq., Wolverhampton . . . | that -his prices and the quali the articles ‘supplied will be | T- Hardy, Esq., Croome, Worcester als * found upon a par w avast Spence Peaean ope lent in the | A- Gray, Esq., Wheatly, Oxon . >... esi kingdom, and is. aware that only by strict attention to | Rev. T. Bevan, Brosely, Salop Prats = WELD ‘Z busivess, moderate charges, and fintring! nly in articles of the | C. Sayers, E+q., Southtown, Suffolk Fe o ne most soners or description, that he can hope eather to higeiredoa a | T. Moody, Esq., Great Yarmouth, Norfolk a8 ote business or merit a continuance of the ioe of those who may | Rev. T. Fowler, Belton, suffolk = a ree & honour bias with their countenance and support. pli rots Nur- | Wm. C. Moore; Yarmouth, Norft ie F sery, Beverley, Yorkshire. Mr. Gibson, gardener, Bushey-park = he ro Ae er, Southdown, Suffolk a . _ ‘ rdener., -house, Isleworth . “ob - CORBETT begs leave « thos Noblemen, a ‘esgrove-hall, Suffol ve * Geo » and brother Gard 0 have so liberally aniels, do, near Lea‘herhead, Surrey . patronised his. 5 system of Heating tloticutiral Bolitoge of every Sm) tb, do. ee — Shackel,. ; description, and as it is rapidly becoming » takes this C. Lidgard, Hammersm ond hele Jaret ru method of ed who are not yet acquainted his Miller, gardener, etme Surrey vig %@ ‘ate terms, that asa Patent Fee fur every ho so Bigg parseryman, Epsom “ 5 £5.88 ds do. Ga amington . . Ps may Bee Pa Cardener, nnersbury . . sag his Lumsden, | wickenham . . re e 2 efficiency, Gurary, Fah hehe ped +e im plici also the necessity of Wilshere, . do. eee ar os jae ae ie Set os ha in gaieattek to bis Mabey ad Jackson, nur: }» Ki 4 > att Letters Patent, he will rigidly enforce the rights the law allows Henderson, we Pine apple Place . ancl C homily may | 3 pate oe by taking up som — ig The trou, mba r gutters, m aaet be made of various materials. but | a iron. the | ERE or pipe fro: a retains the heat much longer. widt h and dep th of the rs should be va ried re ari correct ennalat tuents—I. of the e plant to be manured ; 2. of the soil cr der surface on top peat pees e intended for the wok of Ericas Bis ye td hou ne plants gener erally. ‘or . eet) y I pode Corbett’s open-troug “4 us. To all at Bi Orchidecen I ‘would mo oist and humid atmo- particularly recommend + be a obtained b assed Soe woe Loerres ar Sg oA - ws That th ts objet ia of tee “nee ; eS, Seek inal nr: i : : fete doubted ; but how is it to be attained ? Chemi alyses | 3 Pree bi skal aS eee ee ee ean only be well performed by very skilful chemists; and i Sigs Sis they are re ex sive. Individuals in this country can hard} attention at last t seems thoroughly aroused to Pos thie Jabo veers Rear apa | may. easily be Sy | trough, as. may seem “advisabl le. at even if convinced, of their importance, an and the inconvenience of branch rts of culti ation ; but that hi kill e investigation mast be ars a water on the floor of the house, which often just now to be the favourite topic of inquiry is the act rat undertaken for the general makes it disagreeable to milk on. Another advantage, of of Man Our ces of Liebig’s book have publi bedi bodies: ey isa subject tw which et rand em the more importance, is the n of th already, in part, explai he views of that chemist, and sae s Bid We trast from the water, which: is. ee more ee and adapted to the subject will be further elucidat e in th we n be't syst aiitacall ne noigbicstertgg rae, Be ¥; not | hot pipe. Dari ring the resting season of Orchidaceous Sees ss i a cao aes Pcs eon sr — dong only iy tha t saat ye by our two pet Horticultural a plants, the atmosphere of the hontee is easily kept less t theo manur 3 Le € | Agricultural Societi The united efforts of these three | humid, by not removing oe wets od tose part of the lids. desired by eqine of those whose experiments are recently ciations would ine produce an aécumulation of | For Vineries and Peach-h ald answer exceed- recorded, preat pp y positive data, whic conve’ manuring into a branch | ingly w ate whe “a spider; for the k t pon tl a) t f , and. establishi t upon 2@ solid foundation, trough can n be covered a the trees are in fiower, and Nothing I plet i y voi be | a gi ft of the greatest value to the rural popula- when the — sis approaching towards maturity. On the A plant, like an animal, requires food, and obtains it | other hand, d owing season, y| al from the air and from the earth. Certain kinds of food a r ed hui tmonpher dans - — aed are required by all plants indiscriminately ; such as water THE PANSY. ee aes sefapat gina’ d pn » Ee mn "the bed all and bark-bed, the trough uesera and Rat itr kinds of food ri ‘ed ie Sn hey ina former | number given a list of some first- being two feet from the level of the ky I eee aud spensal some species, less, Or even delete- any degree of heat wi uch less attention than is rious, to others ; such as alkaline substances ts of iro by which the form of this favourite flower is ‘determined, quired for some houses with a boiler ry the same pst Copper, an nd othe F mineral mater rs, The art of manuring } 4. 9 show-flow wee. the and most essential quality to tion and e equal power as — rds pipe. During the last rtain limits, the quantity | examine is its form which eer ppg severe for this 8 of that kind of food which is universally necessary, in 07 A poe nin that f by ea i pees and in withholding that which is useless or deleterious f manures is thus simple, application of * is, in iaehe extremely complicated, hog can possibly exami ne. It is, in the first place, necessa sary poeueaion sabes kind of food a plant pepectaly requires ; ; vegetatio i; and 3 those of fravtfeat tion: the ana a a seed But it is the end hg ten is that which forms the 0 it is necessary for the aol tivator to ) promote the a rrahanel f rmation of tha touch the circle not projecting be- : rt of it. The follow wing diagram | will re ese this point : —_ of the cou as low as six aes re hrenheit, at bos orth o — in morning. At that time the therm the — = was from 65 to 70 d ; pres in, = taciees frost may be raised ersons accustomed to L The petals should ie: large and re because i in that case bo indentations must be sha Ho id d a | + | incon cannot fail to observe the _ | is ben | > ie Wells, ke near Exe of the eo ees t guarantee eficial to air, as neat with him, for I believe in het taining new ene i am only pei cs Sa the la beauties of n on same hole, car ange The beds are hee goo wat Br ia fot cana of May are watered with liquid cow- dung. Veget ation continues till Propagation is effected by seeds or by bulbs; the later “ se They are taken off — oe of the re kepi t through winter in a ce rotected ad Nang season, wh the other: Ts, but were poe more pine The “pla tn hire h ce £; and to show that there is lasting gr of if beau before us if we will but t investigate = It is the infinite variety of t uit w = so much 7% large@ize, citer plenty of drain- > grow dort in ioe and to A with a little fine sand, , for the oO x. a imire, of n tation is so rapic ly in that Ti do a belie the love of fi gael some poe to allow card for che stem- hw che w sro ee od E ef e 2 ang 28 28 a & be a be turned out of the foe oe eco SO as to | eid. infor the ree en shaking off ff the earth ; The a? , dressed Tike ‘ore in soup or as a vers Bag! _ e sewed are edition in salad, alone, by PB a a! svith corn salad, endive of both kinds, Ted cabbage, beet- root, and an ayengee neg ructive, Bag healthy ; e , repoted in a specced pot, in peat and sand, with drainage. Hitherto the ey have € been sufficiently Scarce 3 ot th A wher hey thrive, but as th ey become more plentiful they 7 ed mr be tried in stp s, and I have reason to fo afficien! aly ha n light peat, an nur . a good dep ea hose of many ies to form bulbs as “the base 0 f their leaves, I y; it has te antiquity, aia the Paoeleva aes been arenes ind Hi as ™ served at table, the flowers fer red i aie: sent ats yellow str — and: little stamens, in i a very pretty effect. The reat Crea’ i 2B sides to the happ’ of man #1. Groom. ON THE CULTURE OF THE oo a DEPPEI AS A CULINARY PLA 827 was — into Egle, ‘directly from of Oxalis, which Messrs. L They are gently boi ed a salt an water, aes a been washed ond slightly peeled ; ay er eee — the yolks of eggs. They are = phon up and endive, with white sauce, ~They paige in whatever way they are dressed, a tem aan suceu- easy to digest nnerecing ea the most: delicate lack bands of the same jeune he leaves as sorrel, characte: eight or nine rear eiehs to ee Nature possible, @m operation evaporation pce ei oduce t d th sufficient moisture was not Britain ‘n 1838, During my tour ea goat tas I only saw | the Oxalis eee aan much size. The: retained round the stem og ol it to pro some, pieces of turfy peat round the tagger ata ri peey peat to be place ae ara season I placed d | the English alone know how to keep in ciutifat con- b | diti tion. Recep ee 3 I found that the culy: friends it pos- 3.937 ¥0 or ¢ nearly four inches... + A Cen! #ths of an inch. te OTTAGE GARDENS.—No. fl. Dearie the —- aan, be —— on the cottager: bu thes os map csagh ing w wd war may be advaitagconsly peees§ a the nn : chen ground is tolerably dry and a for orig, * ug for a sowing of ra an oui: and he Presi Aopihs three feet apart, in peas are to be laid as of the drill i the other, but n hie ft * crowded, and then covere Ps + for some fost the-Ylairy tH had the desired effect, and wes Youe Tigmefpus and of ‘ize than. I had 580 that Inow Tones ie soc of them, wSomating cf thee bulbs last season. using pea ee f nearly the size of the pach eeneed by woo. rofl success. The | Verv paist hie without thinking | “of enor ie d plas a are a any use. has only been pr ngs oe ciated in Be elgia country of vegeta pti if ever there was one This Oxzlis | am, the | s ans may have beiiion drills made for ae. but, intend of — sown = Peas, they are to be a jerk s distant from another in the ro*. it eles should be about half the size of the om & green peas lo your great Elizabe se towns whose affection for ped t ell known to all require fo be which cipal crops w - cane avail: ourselves of this give a selection h | who visit them, has been in this case distinguished by the | the fruits which are re considered by Mz. Thompson of St a a i Naam i THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 69 le ee a I 7 } mi la th . * ei pamen cultivation ; 3 and we whether it would not reat while to pomage autumn to = were plants of chee nurseri ere they are likely to be obtained true to their. names. 4 ipl. the ple, oa emer age Space will admit of only fou trees, the oe — in, Kine Feria Ribston =n pin aa! Dutch Mig ms with the addition ‘of the Altreston end Old ight, the W ton ng, een oe Belleflewr, and Scarlet No gf ag: 3; where fen, the same sorts, with the addition of the Downton Nonpareil, and Pennington’s sr ing —Marie Louise, Beurré de Capiaumont, Beurré Dicl, ‘Glout Morceau, Easter Beurré, — Beurré Rance. uld be — renee ee sortsthan these. They be of first-rat and os enough for standards. Sev eral ioe srs "be grafted on the same tree he best are the Green-gage, Washington, Coe’ 8 “Golden Drop, and Early Orleans. Cherries.—Ma: ay e, Late Duke, and Morello. These may either be train iT against a Lig ang Se walt or pt yt building ; and where this be done, they m grown as standards. eee sand a be ented in the same way. Go Ove «he but the following may be : sated as the very bet sorts for Yellow Champagne, pa: Bary Sulphur Pitmaston Green- gage, Masses. s Heart of Oak, and ce arly Green ape Woodward’s Whit ae Taylor's r Ven d Crysta’ Currants.—Red Dutch, Knight’s Sweet Red, White Dutch, and Black Naples. The latter is far superior to see ge right Raspberries.—Red Antwerp, Double-bearing Red, and tele Antwerp. wherries. —These are as variable as Gooseberries, the fall, ja d Scarlet, ( Old Pine, and the Red aud White Alpine. fs = dia ae will be found | very ar The ey m may be confidently relied on as by far the best selections et | M.E.H. HOME CORRE CORRESPONDS NCE. Pears.—I quite a wit h Mr. peti that much use- ful knowled t be made general % Ceres cultivator ed publish the i that experience aches hii im as to the peculiarities of different variation; thor } led lyk By € f particular sorts to b parca ee the “aaliy BY fae pears es pecially, thant 24 ec supp: osed ;. ear has got a bad character in an unsuitable locality. I once Yorks a at a place where there is a capital collection of pte including many of the most approved aaa some of these I found o raat bedi sa am Lonc of the highest merit in the Cates of vow Horticoleral Society, were not eatable. Fo or example, th ‘asse Colmar and the White Doyenné spaces of eee Gakias “Sens possess, when favourably situated, never became melting ; neither did t The Glout Mor- ae from walls and standards was only second-rate ; e from an east The aa is the best pear I ine tasted this season. D will all ripen about May. For the last two years our Ms tsh , and the , haa The practice of a entioned by a corre sat be too strongly re- mmended ; I always 4 it it necessary, and find it pean beneficial both to fruit and trees.—J. B? Whiting, Deepd rocoli.—In your second number, I per- ceive a paragraph treating on this Pespogrr er poe the remedies recommen ded in which a 0 doubt T beg to communicate a san I have apie’ ‘for some years, and which I have never found to fail,—which is attain able by ey ery man, in alm ost every situation —and hick cess he - stove = ixty twenty “} 0 thirty —s high, to accommodate Musas, &c.— A. S., eigh Par. fe, Hanis, Jan. 25, 1841. [We shall sf feta nalioe ect excellent pape’ betsy I should mention od you that Mr. uggested rag Ines grafting the filbert al the ag k of the Span is none, the trouble not worth naming, and, if properly spplices the result in every way satisfactory. In the mh newer omit to ridge up the grou nd I intend for nish n hich —_ a t throw up suck TS, Wi ill of this kind, which years likely to answer his ae Ina a large filbert-hedge which I have, 1 ym e that a oe plants have female flowers, and only a few "male ca prin Frost ‘to pulverise it; when ~ Ue is arrived for sowing, rad yi" a only take place when both are on ee same ig it over regularly, and ould it be worth while to tie branches with male fo ‘orm it into beds; I burn pranings of shr a par thins a ap trees which have none, or to shake them and hate that may ‘an ve ton por etl during woe and over the whole wild bezel ?—K. [Take t the catkin-covered spread the | ashes son the beds to the depth | of two the filbert inches. Then — the little pink females are the earth to the depth ‘of four or five inches, sow a oo just formate iy rake all in sm nd the opera Chalk.—You 4 us that carbonic acid gas is the great tion is finished. I have only father i ‘add, that the | source of food to ts. What, tone in ee best sub- fresher the ashes are. used the better, and those from green stance to spread ie poor ch soil, so ‘0 induce it d are preferabl hose fi dry.— Brassica.—[{It i 0 gi acid so gradually fat “it can lat that in these cases the alkaline bases found i db H.S., Bedham ynpton.—{ Carboni ‘ood gresk are what produce the effect. It is worth | acid cai pA malled from chalk by the agency of tryi ng n of soda, which would probably be equally | acids, or F other substances, w uced into efficaciou init. The air far s. mut in Corn, and a Cure for it.—Take as much dung- hill water as will make your quantity of corn swim ; add nd to obtain it as muchr salt, big a pound of Lastaniga fir saltpetre, or in nee ag ct pbs unds of c compares as will cause the gait ae new vinery bay cs pine Pet at _Elm- hall . er to bg theaaing of the light corn, " strain it out and dry it wi me nrg lime or dry turf ashes. Be careful to sow it the xt day or the e day following ; for if wet weather pears Grapes fit to send to table 36: gi of ee in months from the time the were about se enteen th le of December. pass and will ‘not grow. As the pickle decrease, it may ag all cellent plan in keeping os ~t is to give a little fire in the morni 4 that may be the seed intended to be sown is pickled. a3 ae ering pri Plants.—I have often seen 77 old b se th ot ie ing ao tes tees: then give air, Aomrad SNe ase all night ; the air inside by such treatment becomes cooled , SO that F “4 7 rc 7. the chance of 'y dS d, the fruit kept dry, and mouldiness a tl eee yee easing ually raising the ponntsts in the spring. I think anil abe neglected Fl might be flowered in the same manner.—Richar oinsettia Pulcherrima.—As additional means of mprovi ce the size of the flowers, ri would recommend that a a ik healthy plant, not less than two years old, Mr. Tillery in the Chronicle (p. - 36). “This plant should all summ during its growth by all safe still ag have ee two or three of its strongest shoots ed to remain. When these shoots have nearl pang th ei a in ‘part | Be Pate round.—About ae oy. yan Targontuns in the o, gran Pare 3 n diatinet “beds.. When the plants are well esta- | eer the open ground, we propagate by cuttings from em goes we fin aes ge arden, so tie les, of pe oe rai peer is one of the most ie ecoctiny ta effect ee i as Pelargoniums i in open beds.] scare ition by Leaves. —Iti is well known, that man: wood ripens, allow the plant to go 0 gradually to ever, is of “te stove. Should it offer to goes too soon in he most “pa art the resul ult of art, an wie peculiar circumstances. a“; fes it hak. Peat t the beginning or middle of April will be quite tim: h to begin to pro pagate it. At that ti time take the cant women eyes from t yo way. Another in a “species of "Meksons plan had attracted a stouioa by the entvineinaéy aq branches, and treat them as recommended by Mr. Pied iced of the leaves which clothe i its wiih an The This e fra- and on to the ¥ er dry soil, were flavourless as a besa 3 Tillery. Cut the old leat down for — : , Shake off all the soil from ii away all | gility aisenn soil, ee their usual exoellence, and also lecayed roots og! ruses art strongest nies. Gopal it) 1 laid some io the fallen leaves on the ay in ae pot. pened about their usual time; the Beurré Diel from ie as small a pot as you t its roots into, and place south and west, s, and in dry soil, i never found . in bottom heat ; treat it = hollow in less 3 Meither was re Swan’s Ese from t wall at | season, and for pur scp Beaton, ace an three weeks the base of the or mide “i = nume- all equal in our to some I have eaten "fon standard ie Sr Ww. Middleton, Bart. pan small roots. Every single leaf, some bs) half an on the strong clays of Herefords hire. The Beurr nes > border, t to be 30 inches inch i snared Rance, = 1 from w: wall and standard trees, was generally Pes Th t for it helf, ha preg but it it would not keep pained than January. This | shall a a certain portion of vate ground t ‘bones. Will di appears to be ea deteriorated ml ungenial con- | any o} Ht ine ms than ont 50 of bowen I ought to add—say to every ten square feet 2— just as Belocs on the margin ae the leaf S.P. ewise all the af we ore Trew aes suited to the soil and oe ality. The C ¢-Criataan, and was sweet and insipi d@’Angouléme from Was quite worthless, but from open an much smaller and much fanals beter and it is evident that om is one mg ; if allowed to become gare pati ‘they more troublesome, ery seldom make such saga pero Pot them in two t vegetable soil or well -rotted manure from the i having been nO: beds, and as mall porti n of sand, and plunge them i in the pea eee a. : bark- F a small pin’s he tarts issn fr ira , age Le ping: We | reco ae tae cteion use plenty of drainage, nh keep t the moist. They | Cure for Scale on Peach-trees.—Get t will Bei improved by bettom-thest. but ery is rer tenacious clay and dilute it with water till it comes to the after the suckers Pte become established in the pots. “A | consistency of paint. To every ¢ of ¢ Pp ‘0 60° will keep the plants from re- | add halfa pound of sulphur; mix them ceiving a deity! ths “winter months, and the trees ail over. It will be bet from 60° 'to 75°, or even 90°, with sun-heat, will not be , and the seco —: awd not too much in , although ‘will do very well in a thoroughly dry. ‘lower tem We havea p How in fruit which | to swell. To p Pini w wad removed from t parent plant about months | tazeous to nail mats over the trees, taking | ewe rota he my ith tater of 156 ras, mi kill the scale the 70 TH E GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. i See he it. No mildew will make its appearance till Iuly, ont but Kittle then, compared with aan mr pp Tf mild its peter syringe the trees with watt, eer a 1 find that the mila Kyl Oaks. cla allusion to he subject allow me to the qualities of a ed oak. This variety is tlerbly common in the woods in rhe na ee my near Stans’ y builde ers as to their estimate of i its seis I re- When nt pe pes sh at the timber a the coun pal on y for the co no is not Peres oh than half the “mag 3 80 that giving om per foot for the sm | we are Ty, spring, I remarked that all those pansies which the men had turned under the Beng of the nure) during the winter. The luxuriance and fertij tne remarkable. I n never saw any a finer con. the autumnal diggi not only fresh, but were grow- dition ascaar Get The soil i is a strong loam but not Poe: ing vigorously, thought ‘blanched through the absence of fan nmcy also that the det, light ; ang thos e of the numerous detach ied and previously matter fi stimulant to y beneath fi have the surface. This has “taught me that, instead of using | bed of selanieorhic under period the trees'g grow ve frames and glasses, which all who delight in this pretty luxariantly. No one hing Fe. fore go Gree Pip | flower have not always at hand, I can now p e o be _in a state of deca saw ted ‘so securely by burying them. I first trim and clean the Fcantes dh 2 willow ground, if it require it, and loosen the surface carefully, | T, G., Clither 4 and the’ the whole about half-an-inch with a ‘atahaiag Pinks-— —A friend dee good rich compost. In the spring the plants will be found perfectly” ‘Protected, and every extremit ¥ spri inging up in ac jh. The 3f ¢1 of m ured some pinks very hes le with rotten ‘woollen 1 ‘eg, “— eel im. soil be congenial to them. Tf laid i in the soil, einige of js the depth of winter, if it is waging le ~ amaten 0 procure them at that season. He lay th whale n fac’ To coal’ of your "readers as are feat a of the be information worth hay ing.— capt G. the Birch ak this may espondent re- than 8. per foot for the for y he the. white oak ? No: we should reckon that we cheated our customers if we used it in any | as it is not at all calcu- so that it is not buried above half- beter ora fittle more. It will spring MA . most of the joints, ~ due season, vi Matt and healthy. The soil used Why e best pansy- minds us that the account given at iio 37 of the 3s dill y ; lated to resist the action of the 5 anosphere, and yellow deal b after Pow am very la oak sta ding, he was * frightened” to think afterwards that it might, on cept Ws bee to be the oak, an eavy loss. = grain of the wood of the: red ¢ k fe b is of +3; 3 g localitie: d abo’ opr the former. Th only u that generally applied to the growth of early cucumbers sd i on a see ve ie bloo oms, in the early part of t ixed with mt one “part of the latter to sed a similar compos on te He says with great reason, Tn writers stoeld have altogether “sdb old Miller ‘out of the way ; surely ere is more goo od sense and informa tion in his bo ok tha an ith him. os ‘ it is like bad m ahogany.”’ I can youch for the sectivany of the at as from my tareat a saaee I have always mes 3 var oak avoided as totally un it for gate-posts and o urpose$ requiring lastin The roofing of se ‘Abbey Church at St. Spe of Spanish chesnut, and I cannot help still ere ~ of Westminster-hall i ad tiful pyrami- alba, or erican je" as which cold pel soils ow its own roots, its winter, grows well and per- fects its shoots so as soon to make a handsome tree if grafted on the common oak, T have be ac Daas that will not flourish in i an oak h tT poy set gree Se the nchered blooms the g ection in the pansy, but the beauty of its paincting. ie ts well proportioned ny finely-spread Lie eo —John Mearns, FAS, al G F of ag FOREIGN CORRESPONDENCE. Boston, Massachusetts, , Sept. lath, 1840.—Mr, Cad- ness f London, “has been eae: Curator of the Botanic Garden pec I am sorry to ‘say, however, ne a bad piece of ground has been pri bo it lies so close to the sea that half of it is covered with salt water ring ie ve Lageocrrns: bis thor gh is but a small portion “of the ground occupied. | The = offer a few of f his. com: anititlalieis which “refers seeecere from birds,” that ie ing his motive ie originally rote he at all mar ardeners in Germany have rmany ory ed «ogee hed i eculiar manner, mics te dye blue, a poi on wie, i they after long oe Sees all s paral birds, but especially ae and that t thi rer is hich is apparently nothin ies a variet aniles fabe lige Jota w ler, with Land he South of Franca w I have vary re- ceived teenehe the Sou ee once from Algiers, } ony to Bee pe on the contrary, "highly “probable, | well- » inasmuc ch as it there is excepting a few flower-beds scattered about as if by accident; the other part being a so a Tt will take along time and a great deal of money to make a-good garden of it, as i " propr rietors cannot city, who will not allow them to do so: on -this account t lies too low. that name. Beye ine ow rs! Foor epee my in the lopedia,”’ tian: « efeph By h is iden- ith el ** New Lucombe ber. — = Eat ‘relates tes to the red an and white oaks is answered had given \ the result of his own Lett ate We Bese f both growers and buyer: upon such subjects. As to Wertminrterhall, 1 have at at this moment a imen 0} gs sub- ed persons speare on all matters connected with natural hi sions of he mals phe jous ways. “That bine should bea gree is: no more cap ea than bry red should tractive colour oe t this are at some distance The con nservatory is raised upon the ruins pr an pak} tiding schol, ps all the walls are of wood, which scarcely keeps e@ severe frost we have here. Tt has the appeara mce oO ge dome iti s capable o of Pogrer, $ 7000 or 8000 plants. of a lan ‘Iti is, how- be an latter is can wie oe evid pet s few so Pa fowler inclined to doubt the 3 authority on the the by are ale but y formed a i in his try this experim t too. I o nature of this patent net, mhether it be a woollen Pry woven material, or made of chi loose knots—expan' he Bs knots, as s the inventor terms them. I have found the same sen- when icthdoatally getting behind the commion co twine the sets net may be dy bets copper ie he be rast to ‘The includes | ferent i of ca meltiag, Prrecce all the OM | pened beth lakes collect grown in stoves in England, oy = ee brrgemsd: of ny s, I am told, are rare X ’ only because they p readily t flowers; even in the first rate pars (in of this State, the greatest part | of the fruit is sent to market to be sold. of Mr. Grey, the president, and what is paid by visitors, which does not average @ 20 dolla: ae cs mpos- lah t, and with twine garden netting that n fabric there would pos- re di hebarey if tested by ae = rmo- meter under similar Sao ae baa f H.K.o y of would | ‘o know more of the. pocket hort e den 20 a mtaining a collection of ‘abo ut 8000. Plante: mith ‘such Fimited means; a garden in this country ae more pian and trouble than in England. In winter the fa collection of “he. ver ity structure of the German cultural ne’ ts, I Bch h . “ bs ght of our * . wild. panied by the fern, that i Cis, thet Lr ge the two different kind weg! used, acco ding rd | summers. _ The atta ‘for scam never r dowees = + +h address given in the Wotic: to Corresponden th G.C. T have o only to request that delay in forwarding hs the lighter] grt the latter is ord ont was o: oak w bh the better —_ of te two. t 7 TE he i 5 made ra n ael. ta hes ansrer de rouuindt of R.’s aramunt are iden: get tie peers of the fo: matter ?—So far J re- C. is always kn varieties of Q. i/ex by the rounded end of its leaves. Upon turing to Mr. Barker Webb’s book, we find that he re rin ae =A peer ei peher meri ay pherss paras ty itn that this communication like 1 As to the gentom i ne be the ens cart rei the net might aod useful } e G. e hot months. "Tropical oe “appear to +e tessa lh a others, the heat here in summer —— equal to that of the West Indies Paris, Professor et, pind —Among the opinions expressed Jan, 21, 1841. in his lecture on the diseases of Henslow oy he. a] my care ederim mn Blight. neo Paes ago I had under t d from the bi ofthe Ame- | socie em b’ ies thank pero, hi i (hit chars oe ing sgh the hoe fabric of inions ; ee my experiments were. specimens, and therefore it may be useful to place - living . rm bs = deal in- with ice, neither trees nor The fllowing winter I syringed the with w r heated to ghee koe i trees are si ogee health. OF in the’ winter. Tro pel At sion of at . ine by the vere: of his. itor excellent mae ntl eng harles Meabarie, 3 January 1841. one ounce. Brick Rubbish a Manure.—One of correspondents Corr., Bee = 25) 25) iageires pt the pet eot is aren kJ f serv i ee microscope, th ntti le range he crops | ing spherical glo upon one aft the fields in this neighbo! urhood were always ery ra colo shay grew together, and were often mixed pre ee Bi wth, wt kilas had ond eight or nine iar before, and attributing this to the burning, I determi ned to try bri ick rubbis h in 1 had been planted five red Coalet comtaae aaee bish (without » particle of ma- JAN. 30.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 71 loured than the common rust; but when they are fully eal they become elliptical, ated and enclose herical nucleus, “compose sed, other, of co- bik be granules " loured pedice el three or four times loser than the greater dia- E meter *; bie globule. | pe he growth of Puccinia is _ different from that of the o kinds of ru: ust of w hi ch Lh ties which ieperite my bundles of fibres of the t! A at first oon only hese r from the an small shapeless m: lour passing through e that oh re it from the e idereni, raise and t till they appear on the outside in the form ve u ly com- oy °o i=] oa yi! a5 of nm a £ BS, _o “p it aie exists, rs rowth uceinia ; and this accounts for I rofedsor Hensh slow’s von i a Leyden, Dec. 3, 184().—Great exertions are ‘making here by live plants from the Du'ch Colonies. Dr. Blume, who is charged with this 3 duty, has obtai ned specimens of Wa rd’s cases from your drawing ay instructions for the Dutch governors an. and Officers. The second ene of pe splendid Teme gale is . —- and a great aga! plates for the third yo- '- re already engraved mg them will bag sae a part of the Crohiaceoas plants of the Mo- Ince and New Guinea. Newburgh, near New York, Nov. 28th.—The _Ame- the vignettes sent will give you some idea of ‘our villa re- oe Mr. Downing, of the New York, has now in the and Nurseries, near pres: a ‘»ned. Mr. rs Says, “ I received the plan and then its b Fe ee td Mr. nson from Mexico, in 1838, an uck it i a po loosely filled with Tillandsia, in which this plant and the epiphytes | 2bsorbed, all its pti will be penetrate 1 e3~ which in wr ith packed. Itflonrished so well in | sary that se tree should be felled; for iff a hole is made at its pemnvern . rn me — clohiog th the pe oe pot, — the foot of runk, or if itis nearly sawn sD tiny: i never disturbe: me! plante: o i flowered for the first time. When growin it has received women is sufficient so = bs ge that has been ied niviptiod ance of water; indeed, I believe it st rome always full. jon When the leaves began to turn yellow, it was set on the floor of 0 take place. These mean s, “by which the liquid is is hed the house and kept dry anid cool for two — ane or more till it up in a few days, withos t difficulty, are mihee very dif- showed flower. It has been grown clos the light, in pe ove of t fro _ ethods former! voor When moderate tempera » Not very damp. i a ) ex- feren baad x + iad dee essively sharp and brittle, rendering it almost eneenyee us to > omen hn | pieces of cui vd lige e been a by others, the plant; and the] when full grown ey re inches to | the liqu rated si cept by the mi ot of osely than those two bi long, age ey bangi a about more loosel; rip bP yee — Botan gister. Z ‘Green house fo dtonby. —A be: —— Lge with iagie ilae fio owers, vobtaitied from Swan River f Cheltenham = It is ~ori e duce a succession of bloom throughout aa winter and spring. It is a propagated by either cuttings or layers.— Botanical Re, egist Ast! ICHION SIDOIDES (Half-h ardy shrub).—Nat. ord. jeodvueaib. From New Holland. Iti 4 a stenidae fe yr ‘plant. from r feet clothed with a furfuraceous covering rbteyay are waite, and ngth, from the The lea inn alternate, lanceo- is at Berlin i in March bivved sig ay La faénth Jancis ee ee New quid rat not pen powerful machines, or by the prolonged re of the liquid which they were immersed. The new ‘and ingenious ri substances into the most delicate tissue. Dr. Boucherie was not con ng pyrolignite of iron and many era cheap materials, used ‘salt water m salt marshes, which cost him nothing, and had the deatian effect, Wood prepared with these gue solutions Lene inet ad press aged expo! se oe rolled in thin rey to the air it vaill never eer ; it “Gad ife Dr. h, announced that the works now in pro- pting ia gro +f |‘ SF€ss_ upon the Society’s grounds, in the Regent's Park, are the | do not; it) F hase no saan 4 in saying that this little page of the principal walks, the lawn, and the medical gar- family of Sogn ole. is one of the botanical cu- —Des quantity of building Among the donations reported wasa is quarries at Calverly. stone, peseated bye Ward, from his ES OF NEW PLANTS WHICH ER ee hd Se oe riosities of the Moulins, Catalogue des Plantes de tian th h coi Ants removed by Cilephorsik 1 A kinds of ants ; most of Seen are mes ae a PSE se eso’ ‘A Daxcit bined erbaceous plant},—A tor roo! al Six inches high. Leaves oblique, tran pert Ben ico-rhomboid, Ted on the lerside, covered wit! peat the upper side. Filo: white, about an inch the Be: ihe thie Te ae . (9) Edinburgh.—Jamieson’s Journal. tig Prtats HUS AURICOMUS (Sfare- Niebuhr’s Travels. ‘New poe beautiful new species of this genus — + Mexico, the S. tubifera, oa —— pee rich purple slender flowers, has seit in a greenhouse in the gaen "of the Hortical:| tural Society. Auboors not the most brilliant, it is the oe a vant of the genus yet jnthodneta.. — of Preserving Wood.—Dr. — more aa pi Hitec it _ wi by deyness or bani eee warping Biackbaree of Hales, near rove dong where it extended the Fatters trom end te dot oe tae tove. The leaves are | pr oem hairy on both 2 flowers are white, j wiles » and about an inch and a quarter long. It is stated : be a “handsome climber.”"—Jamieson’s J 4 Ovonrociossum mAcuLaTeM [(Sfore epiphyte).—This tare _ S$p@cies was imported from Mexico bs Be Barker. It is one of i ted 3s a ee flcingued ed nb a th q q Bey '6 have much the man- 4 in ae and constitution of an Oncidium. When it was . ; was thought to be the Odontogtossum Cervantesii of attention Aha. marerigens a io e has done oS at little . pi the which is en enough Dr. perature at first to 60°, risk. g grariually until the beeinning of May when fe it is from 75° to 30°, and the tnd begin to expand, and give out the delightful fragrance pecu! ‘o them, The coarpoet rin beer the plants are grown isa Ear va ret tee! soil, and the pots rather small than geet ge tert PPh sr. Some! Swansea. wes some weeks my frosted off, but the leaves E in care being taken that the oe ting 19. Rev. T. Williams’, Hendon.—A great numberof the rare and der species of Conifer are here cultivated in the The most specimens a spectabilis, grandis, amabilis, Altingia the The temperat kept peng sir 1, and the plants are arranged upon an st mental iron stage with shelves rising 0. e above aaother.— Juz. 20. Horticulterat followi ar be a en ALL eraasifliam aoe rakes sear oe pymertaeng form albens ; lia, most of the- leurs Acacia melanoxylon, Cytisus xolicus, Bucalyptus piperita, Pres ia a a i a iN a 72 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. [N° 5. ardsia (microphylla 2). sy ny nepalense, Edw: Anagy indica ; Crategus mexicana, the lea’ ves turned brown ; Nandios Out-Doer or Orchard L Continue to manure, trench, aod prepare ground for future crops. domestica, | leaves suffered ; ‘Guesces lanuginosa, young leaves suffered. THE OPEN Bor — Ex ities of the shoots killed Orchard.—Prepare ground for and plant all kinds of fruit-trees _ aie ump Maci aurantiaca, Duvaua dependens | in no open weather, whether against gc or as oe finish Berchemia volubilis; Laurus Benzoin, and ; Cephalan- p vines aries, Pears, and Plums, and finish d: ng bet: wee thus ser gr itea pind ore a Brow: a . pyrifera, and | Goose y and Currant bushes. spathulata; Co ia. Aucuba japonica, only the aooned in the top snffered. Spirea Laadinpends, not saffered. FS ging tipi erin thr gk In. Door net comma Vitex agnus castus, killed nearly to the groand.—Jan. 2 &.—Continue to repot Orchidacez; be carefulin adminis- Carclew, near Penrhyn, Cornwall.—The snow which was falling Plana tres to ants notina po state ; clean the surface hen I wrote vanished the mext day, and since then we | of the pots fro OSS ; _ off oe leaves; re-label plants ; have had fine seasonab! testa 0d the tape meng how the.night | prune tie ‘oan ay otherwise forward the work of of the 20th, when fell to On ti n mgr tar “a any of our Acacias and o! be greatly injared by ie thos, Use no mo: aie than what is necessa! ex. to clude frost and damp, the — to many sincie Te ee more but it is too soon yet to say much — t mpo gre ntry is Greville: bem. ne of the dangerous of th rted and other seeds of en hardiest plants from that coum rosmarinifolia. It | house plants on piace ary is covered with flowers, and at this ny a valuable plant for! _ Pits any Faames.—Conti oO putin, and forward as fast as the shrubbery inthe West of England. A large pliant of Phor- | possible, cuttings of plants wanted for the flower- garden; s mium tenax has been much affected. It grows on a sloping ban Ranunculus Prromged upon a slight heat; give air at every favour- ur th ie old trees. snow which settled | able opportu’ nd water sparin she “2 fine clear mornings its leaves nd r has kited them, whil ut-Door Dep: Expose talip-beds freely on fine a ‘bat protect them, as well d | as —_ cholee bulbs poy: amp iet = frost or heavy rains ; © exception of the old red Azalea | plan neulus indies, which is far more tender than any of the others.—Wm pra B. Booth, SUMMARY OF CONTENTS. genie QD WwW rs tnprotest young hone ahr —— frost, which will now be found ee ee md other evergreens than in the depth ba oe Fors > Gee & Woo n planting mixed coppice rT | woods the different a aaah oe studied and the plants — ‘ suitable planted in grou to the nature e of the of the. space a very s t excellent article upon oral 4 possible, but in wet ive soi hould be delayed > and b r. Mearns, upon time; it wires great forethought to determine “ors — See aE: 5 ARK FRE vd e Pini kind of tree is most suitable and ae e in the Jacek ity, w p also a continua- | ther puncheons, fuel, or bark, be the tuple commodity : 7" tion ‘of the di: i iti 3 am account | the la mooie ag ely Ay rag poner eine ou, Pelee ected, and 4 inds © tannin peg rot be substituted. Continue pi aa rf anc mode of heat garden structures by pccthsy pruning, nine, plashing hedgerows, ditching » &e.— water in Open troughs ; an toe pon Joseph Paxton, Chats ENTOMOLOGICAL NOTICES. hould eon Mereae bg tae remanent open, the gardener and iavietr er cann turn up the land and destroy all grate, and parte enilaréa to ro pick cage and Bove oons off the fruit rees and shrubs. Theloose bark should now be removed from n what is seldom heard of, a new clan vegetable which senses stenhen. Scat we hay es to Correspondents are fit into an fo andr wi uds be- TP should be | cin, m many of the sowings and gin to swell, the female beetle begins to deposit : Pantings sx ted in the etiam be left to the judg- | cay ather she se! a good bud and — : bole in it with ment of the gardener, to discriminate whether it would be expe- | her proboscis; she fixes herself at the hol exg, and dient for him to perforni eae the-exact time: “a recom- | then pases it = with her Seteseier ater thi se seeks another ay ee ee an aaa dag - | bad, nnd n till s il she bas de eposited a nsiderable nom mber of . bud eco ones swel the oecur that the times of so for Vepuitias ‘and Soders; nua oF of petals no eae when y het ‘aed ie encing to force, Saree Ss Seema te oreums nin} Seen tals pine and assume & .. If one of thes portently correct. ts ane pee ne a black head will Se detad te the centre, white ind in ti .most abundant. supply at the reqearet season _ et which Seti ume lowish colour; a few dupe bee : wants spring products ; another those of autumn; whilst athird | (his grab will be found. Breet wholly or partially chan be pe tresidents, re Se sac ponies. and | to a beetle, and should there be a small hole on the side of the tothe gardeser in the last-men’ ett ae aoations ey —- receptacle the beetle will have escaped, the transformation from ree ee ee cotiadead. Tideoebdently ofthe Catoon san” | the egg to the perfect state not having occupied more than a even by the most hen os oe ently 1e causes en: onth. When this beetle, which is dark-brown with grey stripes, merated others less easi y surmounted occur, from som’ Hd | leaves the receptacle, it feeds di er on the ilanwes situation; the most diligent: will sometimes find many things, | of the trees, and is seldom to In the autumn the from the heavy na! his eather, and other circam- | weevils leave the wad starch for cobventent hiding. “elsiana stan: remain undone which have been accomplished by those under bou etr nder the rough bark, in which in more favourable situations ; these should not be forgotten, | they pass the winter. Consequently, as they commence their but brought forward, ote urs era sec sensislt th weber | operations early in the spring, care should be taken to remove all opera'ions of the e: peers te putas are Iphoamcge or | tones, dead leaves, and other litter from under the trees, as well more sala nce tee cei eat - oe a med oA e fy iaccaeding: as to scrape off the rough dead bark from them in the wiater bom; peter ie tefere Ago ast as wel ak’ thie m. The apple weevil is also very injurious to pear-trees, the past Rete AROUND: PE ST A cE time State of the Weather hear London for the Week ending Janu- ofso ing main crops, and of yerformin various other 1841, as observed at the Garden of the pot of. qa m, Whilst there are other matters which may pode pit door - Horticuitaral done « if circumstances render them necessary, bu if they remain undone fio very serious blank will occor in the ‘empemmceeraet THERMOMETER. | general arrangements of the garden ; we shall, therefore, endea- | Wind. | Rain. your as faras possible, to distinguish io our langnage between Jan Max. , Min. I Max.{ Min. [Mean.| hat shoudd be and what may be done; as it is our conviction | Friday S| 3 30.157}, 44 | 32 | 38.0 | S.W.] 10 any gardene: > bagetnie Ov every sowing, &c., recommended in Satare 3 30. 128 30.00;) 43 37.5 | N.W. the pablished calendars bola which we jc iqrevoress would | Sand, 24 | 30.161 29.796), 38 26 | 320 | N. +02 very soon be unable to find room for even rtion of his Mond. 25 2.006 30.195|| 40 32 | 36.0 w. 01 quultifarieus products to come to e to perfection. Tuesd, 26 | 30.000, 29.988), 49 ‘3 | 46.0) S.W. Contin’ advance gradually in forcing of all kinds; take hate i 39.225 30.015), 53 o | 415) W. every aman of the een Ys cesar ng altitude, and endeavour 30.300! 30.250) 44 28 | 36.0) WwW. by ail you ings in that department to coalesce with this me oe {mportant a uxiliary ; im out-door work little be done: store Average | 30.204 30.057|) 44.4 | 31.8.1 38.1 | 128 the mind, therefore, with well-digested plans of operation, to be Petaks:2 Chas j-Tain-at ight acted upon at-the frst fay opportu: ay 23. Clear, = ondy amiga EN mayne ah ras ORCHARD, 1.—KITCH * Boisterous i a: the he morning ; ag snow-shower at In- Door and Fi soil, and dry. uveny.—Give the early taitere Tegular supplies of water, with ay nha (tetra ov man —_ pm A close the houses at and mild; overcast and fine =: Shrektiy prvi Pig ae and Suny. at night. throu: maghout th te fires, but do not allow the fall belo e 28, Cloudy e day; very clear at night. Vix mar.-—Tbis out the superfluous shoots before they get far ¥ $ igh advanced, to prevent them bleeding z 3 te those left money to the State of the Weather at Chiswick during the last 15 Years for wires; taking care, at the same time, not NN do sotightly, or they on ai Week = vas 6th February, 1841. ‘will be injured as they advance ia gro: = ex.—Whilst the trees are setting their bloom give Yeaisin aunty Prevailing Winds... | sam air abundantly, as. ° early in the day as the weather will permit ; gig e which a lal slsice pose sne ge the floor = — house; gradually remove se Biz |S a1 la Fle ; the —— syringe may be freely used as meer Rain. wa eatin 22 ies wa “Cuaneeaneuncaees a —— r Paelormed oF (37.3. 5 0.32 in. 3i—j} 8) 2h examire the pares. terme AB eform: = ws a a ee cnae Which mast ins 378) pegs. bab abababeralala Fie-souss.—Do not allow the plants to become dry at t 32.8 aaa Z — Ye 2 aA s age roots; give air at int eo oe ties, and allow the — my . pee 2 iro ar 33 os gorse he! § 2 laos} 8 1 a} oi al apa t ‘ 34. In the above period, the aie temperature occurred Febra ju he 5, = pn dalton me eg eter 56°; the lowest; Pebruary 5. - they have made os et leaf, andnowra few moore see 1s. oad wet 6 ould ENDING JAN. 30, 184i: extensively. Tue Market has been well supplied this week with Caciurmcowmxs in fram =| Serine Vegetables Eay Flowers, which are for the most free exposure, except andauea reste sne seve: ice and qua ity oa thoy Werk last we Fruits. Pines are plentifa, poy the quality good. Foreign aukonddemnabeans see moderate. .~Sow afew Earl = ona ee 2 Pelee & ‘sf Cos rm Situation out of doors if t : and Cabbage Letraces, and of Saat-taie quality , heinette grise, Pepin @’or, Searles Now | a pare'l, Avi petit, Court of Wick, King of the iP Russet, Nort ening, and y dei ao New'own pias, The snpply of Pears is good. . including Old ‘ie w P A e, Berg pte tecdte. Be herbs g te powder, and sold in bottles.— Flowers, Flowers of all kinds ry numerous. e beantif a fr t Le. lia gratissima, noticed in p. 21 exhibi i ec 'y part of the week, as well as the superb Poinsettia pulcherrima, no. ticed p. 36. Forced Belgian Azaleas, Gesn tongata, 4 tine, Persian Lilac, Christmas Rose, Camellia ica i Rosa Mundi = ra and licatissi P = Mignionette, Hound’s-tongue, which is an excellent me-Not, enliven the shops. Among the plants is a beanti jety of Chinese Primrose, with v — Be variet , With ve flowers ; Hyacinths, Tuli var Tal kinds, and Heaths, are also plentiful. In sae of t the qe of the lis there is a grape called the yeraey Grape, which is he metrpo to the Perla bella, but of much better quality fine Reinette de Canada apples are selling a the. nam: Luton Pippins ; this is valuable as being one of the few ‘lonn apples that may be used for the dessert. PRICES, Sarvapar, Jax. 3), 1841.—FRUITS :— Apples, dessert, per bush. 3r€d to 18% Prmmeloes, 9d to le Pears, dessert, Rer © hf.-sve. 3s to 128 St addocks, each, 3s Pine Apples, p. lb. 4s to 73 Al » per peck, 7s _— : m, per rage oe os os me 1b. 3a rapes, Fore: r wole esnuts, per peck, 4s to 7a Grange ba 255 w dnuts, rbush. 16¢ f per 100, 3s to Nuts, per e}— “Biter, per 100, 8s wes a — Brazil, 182 to 208 —— jo 4 . Od to — Spanish, 242; » 6 to jae — Ba > 288 VEGETABLES. SO ated foc pick. aie. -Lameceecmeaienaben ae Cal re, rd. per doz. Cc abe Plants, ey es dd wos 6r SIEGE ee x 100, bee ue Brussels wi ‘outs, hf. \ecanter- 26d) Brocco li, fee e, pr. beh — Sprue, or or aclu rown, sito a Sea-kale, per punnet, is 6¢ joes, pet ton, 51. to mace, per seore, | ed oa 1 Seis ice Endive, per score, 2s to 3s real es, per half- | Celery, bundle (12 to 15) Stoel aloes ls. 6d 10 Be Smalls per ad Tarnips, White, per doz. ou 2sto Be Wate ‘ doz. sm. Carrots, per doz. bunches, 4# to 5s a per half-siere, 2s Parsneps, per doz. 6d to ls 6d Fennel, per bunch, 6¢ Red Beet, per doz. Is to le 6d Thyme (green) pe: behs, & Se era, henley aes Sage (green) per d Salsafy, per bundle, mary igre ) per bunch ef Horse Radish, pe: = Vani, Or 2 cacuetert tal ee bunch. ie Radish, Red annet of 6 han ‘'ansy, per doz. bunches, ls _ Spinach, pad'tbiee: es Rhubarb Stalks, per bdle. 1st 10M inions, per bushel, 4s ie M pobrenmess 5 1a 6d tod sents 3 — p. hf. Morels, pe’ = boule), perk eh. oy Prete tari intl Ib., 122, some » per doz. (fresh), per Ib.,, "Bs to Ae Notices to Correspondents. are greatly indebted to Mr. Teschemacher, and hope often m. We ° heat f bs eva h t rt their letters, they will If correspondents wish us to inse! eir All others will remain express them in temperate language. om seen —Moss only attacks lawns, the soil of which is Pics to 0 sapport : See of grass. When on is exhausted, grasses begin off, and their place is taken by moss. The obvious mode tx “of protetiqne is = axe the oh @ good top- dressing in winter, either of malt dast, or nitrate of soda, or soot, or any other manure containing araener finds the growth of moss eS or 4s the han pcr ee t.. Ben, panded oyster- alliatives and no’ . Make your adit pani soon suunther Ui bp us asks how tocurethe distiatin turnips called fingers vise an: of the advertisements se ph nc Mog clude them in _ ae wet but thes d toes We & D.A -—We ws, the abstraction of the rpose na or a the last aground sai ot ag Hortie’ turalin: sap pe will be in gieste ng ripe s aha pear, or Bh pats in Febru ing the bark on which they a placed. uces a hard white ee make into different articles fot ae rege Sat ee the hard e received Pha Ng staid be much obliged to Mr. Bathu e blue igus a Journeyman ot oe lan “ ve us inform: he Fespenive ities of the two Britis porch forests Me bse: be glad to oa are ot Mp bee imself to such facts ur reader carol ear oaks, ss of Mont Di. eyed We mu ot Sree Aen ‘er Sirtak of =| Esco sceeagaeets os JAN. 80.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 73 will prevent the scale from multiplying, and in a vay = will | to pass through the brickwork into the trou i come off in flakes, bringing the insect with it. Kee pines pode with hemp, or rope well opened and ee (stg hace, hy — N E W Es - F -§ H E 7 E EK in good health, and you will not be so liable to be Shiated ith grease: a strong coat of cement over this, well joined to the Suber GEES £ it. Thesame may be applied to the brown scale on Peach and cick wate; Wil render it perfectly water-tight, because the hemp of Parliament, Fig trees in houses ; bat ere are numerous crevices in ae wili allow the pipes to expand and contract without breaking the and t the deb ; wood and bark wrere the insect lodges itself, you had better | cement. 2. By means of a stuffing-box, which is a short piece of “ee vee sph the Address i in answer e it, have been scrub y s well at the proper season with soft soap and | pipe, at least two inches more in diameter than that intended for } f home interest duri ming. the wee! water, and then brush them over with the following mixture:— | heating, over which it is p , With the cavi tween the sides The as: ain 2 ft soap, 1 1b of flowers of sulphur, well mixe bout | of the two well stuffed with hemp or rope: the water-pipe never pars it 0 mtains that @ ond ails in al i4gallons of water. Or you may use Mr. Erringtoo’s mixture recommended in No. 2 of this Chronicle. Or you eer dce Mr. . . ense I r rope becomes sufficiently heated to injure the cement, 3. By directing among age Eu os Suites for’ — econ! | , when he first lays d @ pi oO be Kyle’s mixture of clay and sulphur mentioned -de es! elbows as mi jred merely to rise over the side of the pee of smell’i nd rabbi very acute, and almost apy sub- | trough, instead of passing through it ; this would not in the least tion and the disputes with China will - camicly wie, t: to man will prevent their attacks upon the | obstruct the circulation. Respecting copper-troughs, I would of the b Spa k o mixture of Bight soil, quicklime, soot, and | no: on any account water plants with water that had been stand- See isd ae effect the aed sh oii roughly plastered on the | ing in them; neither do I consider that stagnant water in such a Portugal a= the oo of this. cow 1 i ¢ that his plan of acti d i ugt 1 ie the masses of floating: ice which a ok severe — vistted the kingdom of the was to operate pel arp mst the Two Sicilies on the night of the 4th in Three ships, shal referred, as an Poe. ag to the Duke of Fyellington" 8 "PRUSSIA —The Church Question—It is stated that | two of wh elonged to th al Navy were lost in proceedings in Po ae e this remarkable in- | th this port, but the crews were saved. rench brig was stan gts the Marsh al, to fre! honour of a ing their et into the harbour. The sea vers whose praise | will raise my voice whenever the correspondence with the Pope, “ares bee the Mole, and rendered it impossible to afford ] Tn fatu Ai ¢. which were ooneee? at their occasion "shall present itself.’” He then referred to th lines of Torres Vedras formed by the Duke of Wellington, = the most cisenanak: manner with the head = — urch. This determination is said to oe 2 mcs G See hitherte withheld from fecal moorings. ee rom Cosenza, in Calabria, we learn that an earthquake, rr 15 seconds, sa on the 27th ult., and extended as far south a: as Aion ene many cae te were thrown down. Vesuy us Was CO cred wi ith sno d “The Murder of the Bishop | of that the tailor t to be in poe he Bisho shop ed himself with —which “The anya he : said, ‘‘ justified his calculations, and pacman sensation in Germany, where é these lines were invincible.’’ The Marshal ments have to the tte — defence he had adopted at Toulon, io Sacinmiion the concession now 1814, wi there w ere ramparts, but with 21, 000 m Protestant monarch. against 70,000 he br: i by the chain of hills bare league from Toulouse, where he Eatee who was stated in our las' threw up ‘some works, and obliged the enemy t guilty of the aera make a very long movement, and managed to struggle in | and his noha She says that pang tr Ancien mes) scree a at a hatchet, and knocked pe eee ofthe palace, in rence to this expression of opinion that Marshal eeper open ompelled Fist iit jal feel- | threats to show him the hi ve ee bishop’s room. ings, and that “the fate of the measure was oomaute pce phar pe M. de Lamartine saa! geet normctige b eloquent speech, to which all parties assign the mento rat oF peed gen tab he described the measure as false in ta 5 ought not to be isolated fi her by violent On served him so Jong ; : dyer tharloe he stretched her on the y blow on her head. The bishop de- iar france, & country to the winter Pea his desire to” receive his sister, Queen Chri her rectgitinl —The Calcutta Papers give ‘some account of a Company # ponies at Bombay for trading on the ir ndas. Govern it seems, and moi onibiy packets on that river, whic it 6 the Gurrah or eastern branch as teas sAaint Ty abou! grid Serge south of Lahore, and 1,200 miles from the s expected that the unfriendly ped bs the people on poy lower part of the Indus will any m being at i= te ms = ct - a clared hi if enly to give up whatever be had, bat the prisoner bound him to secrecy by an to bt 2 is, its "Cita, na as injurious to the peisiple : expressed of honest her ace and he ex his Id fay vate up his — ne per parse, and tone the first room £ iife a} ye a moment the pect poate fa ree ee stooping to lift i it up, exclaimed, “* Ob my God!” The itical power, gave pedigree “and after a long ive it was resolved on cae aes aeiaien “erie romped . Thiers has since So ae the arrival of the 1 Es first’ which have ever braved the. seas Cape The’ cir appearance created great astonishment among | = ge — him to the b the head Before making eral "holiday The Governor had any prepara —— aa xk his chain. The Bishop’ s faneral took place on ke +h Lith inst. ith with usual na’ ai kcwatiess > sides oe as the | Prot and the Chilian flagship gare | them 7 ¢ Universities:— Much satisfaction is at the a dechine of the Baperor of Austria to withdraw the . Erlangen, } written by Leipzig, &e., “by which the Protestants of bere eney will in fature be pone stu those ancient seats 0! bl ay —The Ac coke of S ungary and anew edition of the w f Frederic the Great. The commission ag mare re "i perce is basa oe of Alexander Vi umboldt, and Professors Raumer, Ro! and Boekh. wa this iy on the 1983, & bat Was Maal Oo "ants 9 yee All ‘on shops were nherery rg be an sat up, and business entirely suspended in bonour of the event. is added, that the cont farsnations of Chili hare been exami suitable in every respect 0F steam -| reread Syma a5 Eorer—H. ¥. Psa Hydra arrived 00 the 24th at Marsei despatch. for uae i not t btw the parr of reve a RO vs a supposed to have ated at Alexandria decision of the Porte on the resumed that state of limited and - Which they coi gag Jan. 30.) ‘THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 75 adlfam teat, OPENIN ESSION On SD gepe' Her Msesty es = ded i in state to the f Lords, and opene aft inca pnom in person, with the ives speech from the tl “ My Lords Rd Acree fave the 5 salistaction to re from Foreign P assura of their friendly “disposition, and of their earnest oa sto posi ny The of affai in the Levant had ea beena cause of atuniaen cet a ae of danger to the ral tranquillity. \ ith a view to avert the evils which a continuance of that state thi was calculated to occasion, I conelaced wit peror of Austria, the King i ention i shall be laid before you. to inf that the ay acy ed h hav adopted in executinn of these engage ts h e been pa | SS he ct a th of the: n: y -operated with those of the Emperor of Austria, nd and es Hee s of the Sultan, and hee displayed ustomed a ae amd Kill Hayne end the coast o! — M near eae to eesaid reparation and heey pop foe aed flicted u me of my subjects by the officers of the Emperor te China, ma for i inc Acne offered to an agent of m a Naval bring these matters to a speedy settle: t by an ami arrangement. Serious differences have nm between Spain and Portugal about the execution of a Treaty concluded by those Powers, in 1835, for regulating the navigation ‘o. But both parties hav cepted .F . a - to fens able to effect a reconciliation be nm them upon s hon le to both. I have concluded wih the yok # Republic, ain and with the Republic of Hayti, Treaties for the suppression of the Slay Trade, which I have directed to be laid before you. “ Gentlemen of the House of Commons,—I have directed the oan for Pe year to be laid before you. ry sensible of Howeve ofa ieee E Sp foe: ee of economy, I Bim it ir in uate provision be mi ‘“* My Lords and Gen: will be submitted to you without delay which “wiit hen have, aes Mand object the more speedy administrati f jus’ vital import ed = ent to ensur Sai youd and most xs of the Commissioners sare ent of the laws relating to the . ao m, bly fence of Divine Providence that all yo i directed as to advance the great in- pesthory ‘Of morality at religiov, to pea peace, and to pro- mote a J Splightonert legislal slation the welfare and happiness of all asses of my s At ‘the conclusion, of the Spé@ch, Her Majesty returned be Buckingham ace, with the same forms that had arked her pr firese to Par liament, and be th Houses adjoarned till five o’clock. nou E OF LORDS. Tuesday.—On the re-assembling of the House, the Lonp Caan- CELLoR having communicated the speech ame the throne, the Earl of Dueiz proposed, and Lord Lu seconded, the oeopee in answer; which, in addition to thet topice mentioned in t eae ip the congratulations of the House on the birt h oft the Princes: The Earl of trad said it ee to ys have always bee: ress in answer to he hoped that teas loceahige would usual hte as not to concede to him Beery d hit ere st ge conceded to per. similarly situated ¢hear, hear). it ~ magn or cig the happiness o of o = 28 q 7% . 2 =] fm 2 F 44 rs ° 7 a io} © * nabied her to interfere in nat = eye oe ey a an terference had bee Chusan (hear, hear). He had ev ato would spur regard to points of legisiation' Le which their ‘oraatips sdtemtion would pa drawn, it was us ee him t p their lordships e in sin those iota Arne to the at we bat House, and indeed by the legislature. there had @ecurred arts of peace. i ance, but, on the contrany. yi reference to the new constitu di solo: oF as there existed of —, a nature as rendered it impossible for any foresight age ope oo com: necessary that fetrecpecenee am po we pear oF ee wanna. fr" paras was, seco reat diser inte which the United. States of Pavey 9 a ee = was also the stoppage of our yea hn China ; there was the block- ade by France shes the South A aot ports ; and lastly. ane pty eee there had existed no doubt of the continuance of ————— had acquired so much steadiness ‘was every reason to hope that the usually great en proceeded to answer the several io points in Lord Bro m’s country would produce balances ag Bachan nt so far in her apeeeti and coachatnd by express ng his foun aan fe he app vour that the bullion would turn to the coffers of the rent unanimity of both parties on this import Bank of E lb P 4 e eons 4 ‘mark of on be relieved The v bar ex his gh ean rom the pressure that now weig! it down, and from the high | foreign poli i € with ar of interest that had existed for some time. This would be a dnogets Wihely to result fr i tut brew of prt eile Pe pore vd t relief to the trade of the try, pigeons enable the banks | joiced to think that those dangers would now be averted, and that to afford that accommodation which had so important a bearin: France Id joi ith the other Powers in carrying oat mea- mn the — industry. Having these panaicte i i pe tk sures to secure the continuance of peace. e had heard a great ment e, he had also the satisfaction of believ of | deal of the erage ne ween England and France, bat he kne hose Seaiee that had hitherto pressed our “al saber: nothing more fessed understanding on points of gene- were either removed or were in the course of removal. Th pe fend tie eA Eure, The two countries had frequently acted settlement of the Eastern question had op: ert, ey had also frequently acted otherwise, an Syria and Egypt and he did not think he would be too sanguine in without either rtaainig offence at th er might think tens Hrd dane: be pet te intluence of d must ultimately, | proper to pursue. As to the late ne «, he hat attended by th ad taken, icean extended commercial inter- | carefuly to the course of proceeding, bmg he could disco pea tn m thode 6 arts. ‘Ihe cessation of the blockade by France | nothing which France could construe into a cau-e of offence of ie Ae uth American ports would also produce an increas any fault which had been committed on our part. e did not commercial intercourse with those parts, and the wise reco eni- hink that the charges brought against Ru ps Sen ar Ban restored to the place she ought to hold am the peer of After the s: atisfaction he feit in having elicited fro urepe. few observations from Lord BrovcHam, expressive of missed that op @ their lordships’ notice to m the Duke a sake a honour and good faith of the people of that country, in punctu- | which had rendered the greatest possible service to the cause of ally fulfilling their engagements with their foreign credito: peace, the Address was agreed to, aud their Lordships portnceneet ey had set a good example to their neighbours in South Ame- Wednesday.—The House adjourned immediately after its meet- ica, and indeed not a bad one for some of the older states of | ing, - adeputation proceeded with the Address, to Buckingham ‘ope. It gral ng to him to find that those prospects of | Palaci extended commercial relations were not likely to be disturbed by Thur sda lay.—The Lord Cr LL no rvs hshersied any i uption of the general peace the world. Having | tion of the Address to Her Maiesty, an por Majesty’s made these few remarks, he could not but jast draw their lord- | answer, which expressed an entire reliance on Parliament, ia hips’ attention ie uniform success that had attended the ee peace, and promoting the general welfare of "the policy of her Majesty’s Ministers. It ne that they | people. att ment domestic quiet ; and, as re; “hao foreign The Lor HANCELLOR read a communication from Mr. Justice relations, t every prospect of peace and ended com- osapeaie | ie the subject of the indictment against the ag of erce. He had heard ce _ ne Neng Dap results Sst cae Cardigan, a tas out of the duel with Mr. Tuckett, when a co consequences of good fo ‘e, ho rtained a very | mittee was appo and opinion. He eeeribated th pcre of rar dminist nm of the existing laws, the prospects ia and of ex- ed bach. were in his opinion mainly to be attributed to straightforward and m: anly course taken by the noble lord the Secretary for Foreign affarrs (hear, hear]. ition. ut of thanks to a higher course to be eaee 5 pd asi questi uted to boy thet bar rSneaier and report on the —Lord N a-ked Lord Melbourne M answ that Goichinnit had gi the qae: estior pees, Pig and had determined by ee ke the law as it stood, It was, indeed, a subject of thanks, Friday.—Lord Normansy brought in a bill for Bows ae a ook saps than any — power—he Shudea to the safe delivery of | and improving in large town: ie which w: @ frst er Majesty, and to the birth of an heiress to the throne (hear, | time—Lord Waaanecurrre having put p qusnnibs ves respecting ear]. There was no reflecting person either in that House, or | the real situation of Frost and vel other pecker for high trea- e whole kingdom, who had not and did not most ly | son, Lord Noamawuy said that he any particular re thanks to the All-wise Dispenser of events, that there favour shown to them. ev hope e inheritance of the throne of these HOUSE OF COMMONS. He felt so certai ‘The SPEAKER announced that writs had been issued, 0) Address uded, ang. which ved be Tuesday.— daring the vacation, for to which he had las’ Address he ple Notices were given of motions fo po toy Ls brea lordships (hear. hear]. cipal of which are for the amendment the Registration i said, that in rising ry second the Address, he was | Great Britain and Ireland ; the con ance of the rt adeuhens sof yo many deficiencies in endeavouring to discharge | mission ; the better administration of justice; the regalation of his duty, that he must, at ery outset, express a humble | railways; the amendment of the Tithe Recove spat Fe eg vd pees the hope that he might experience all the lulgence which was | abolition of the Spekon pipe of a al Cow atters usually He felt, he confessed, | relating to mg es under a certain amount. h w fr protons gracious Tchenririnigeatocn, he still took cor ceed with the task, because he felt that there was a stren castle porter read by the Speaker, Lord ddress in answer toit. He disclaimed @ presumptive all party feelings, and erted to the birth of a heiress to the Crown. He congratulated the House on the peace- able tenour of th the hn had been put by the noble mover of sters to pr e the iguillity of Euro: A’ter touching upon that t be impaired by the weakness of his adv: th: to) pig nc in the speech, he ote ae Address was & ier gab Royal speech ; but it was also the id. Her demands he earnestly recommended con- lordships’ unanimous appro With faueet which was nearest to their ir lordshipe? minds and h pom which was therefore most ready to : ep A to © thelr Lips, he ust sa: by eavecmns tae not with sucks 5 y en ited by co events, that the: t para- graph in the Aaaetee co! ing the country o1 of 2 Princess Ro;al. He the England ages one = Eastern question forbearing, and Lord picdci. | in reference aa dertiices meddiin dt 2 of the Turkish empire; but Government in ie menot for many years, th: pt at it m was chimerical. The which had preveoted a general demonstration of its pinion. He trusted that, in spit those who wished t cite Fram os war, the of the te » ther i conse r, met as. it bad bees with high s ~~ aE ess of pow anamicabie spirit on ‘this a. ‘gs Channe!, . wom ee aes any catia which might endanger the alliance two S. ‘nee apcorargecr bogie that the | gee whe: Page nege by had been accused Supply of | Water to London. —Seve ral _m ‘meetings have the wharf they were surprised in not finding deceased at i have been the ee ce te. wont shea a ee ; foie. ports posing in Parli appeation is post; but, on going to his sentry-box, beheld hi plishment? if she had once possess: tinople, Ev . _.. | lying down covered w: ood, and his musket on the ground. _ita appear 1M neighbourhood of a springs addressed dissent of a fifth was not necessari reason for the aband nected with the ment of their views. H: ef uspend his opini é the trigger with the bayo ape Weir policy, rere Minktenr shouts have faruished the in. a ee = oa eo i ees the stantaneous, for the pallens entered the - of the stoma a, os ¥ for forming a correct judgment. He r the neck, and thro rong the top - id be found ciliato: , aise vou be to pontedinc - #9 ener tae Plerstane ribs ase gaat ny ie hog 7 afte. It w. at oans, eens of the sentry-box. Verdict, “Temporary ins cot oot to be pallieey cae eee tee ee oe ee ae the scheme would have’ the iy Seiad Cael: & crag? inwe ioe’ ida rea itself upon tts eatin Siaesteroe ffect gtr arsine sie: aad lati mitted in the parish omic f St. Botolph, during He protested against the conduct of Ministers in suffering Par. _— into in ‘opposition to ivine service. It appears that a lady named Mrs. Reddish liament tos ages a summer at a mo- Window-Taz.—A ~~ partte 28 of the parish had received 80/. in notes and yorige n the previous day, ment when this couatry was on the verge of a rupture with meeting pay aa laced it in i uP morning, as she France. The tr beg it was true, had not gone through the. of Bk Wicsacteek Se ee ee ee Saree eee P purse. y aes formality of ratification; bat for that formality the four Powers | tensible purpose of the abolition ‘of window | Was g to church, she found roar! she had neglected to did not wait, bat sent forth fire and sword before the ratification duties. A meclation in accordance with this 0 object was deposif it in : a place o of greater sec . Being rather late, Could possibly take place. He regretted that the name of France i was moved cad ed, | however, _ a, her hai Ree ee ly reeesctings Bo use, she was induced to keep the purse in her es men, a that hav oly tb sesh gs universal The amendment w scared by large maori, and the meeting se three cheers fi Charter and three groans for Mr. O’Connell Accidents.—On Monday a dreadful a young lad, tha‘esteens of €. Clarke, ger in consequence of the discharge of a double-barrelled gun the contents of which en auternd bin. Might. soos Wakao the elbow, shattering a ac manner, and lodging be- appeared that his master st es i AeA cei in lamenting phish for the last ten years . He had been always atin tes toe derst: acted, their former amity would rerurn. speech of Sir Robert Peel > entertained in Bugland by E at i a He 1 admitted into her | pew, purse, and none — a theft. was di aldermen have come si e benev object, and it is expected that the pate to the public will be s al. contrived. = penn ‘the iscovered. The Thames. subscription has been at Lloy: d’s, for the: vk of ba widows and orphans vessel. liao opened of the crew Of this il ayor and who apne olent Death of Hatfield, th es Hatfield, w e Lunatic was tried at the secs Baile, ule Sept ie. for rng # ded Majesty King Georg Soe a Lyne were about to wooed in a boat on the | pistol, in in Drury-la | IIL. and acquil ak ay on bi ig ac a 7 Sten n was placi ing in the boat the fowling- range Saturday last, in the 69th year of his age. £ which had eas ——. and Lag ps left on The late Inundation at Brentford.— ing the gun si lodging t the contents in b respecting the. of this i has been continued Clarke im: ek ohias be eee during the week, and a number of wi have Ss raat ina a save of great exhaustion, AS | a ; who deposed i had ith blood ared that deceased had ged ener’ oat. ; — ee ; : : q ; ; § ; : : Mr. Ellis, “Mr. O’Connell, and oth lutions were. an invasion of the rights of conscience = ; on the. Hoot. On the arrival of a urecal the Jan. 30.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 77 under their notice. The only important point, how- which has not been already before thé e was, the ‘walle of the Kings- of 140 “acres: wtp ‘ground, and the walls by which it is seat and ger i struggled with her qvgreriite as 5 Sate both of whom | were Aamir makers. It appeared from f the are marks nd on other articles of furniture. It ‘doe nonaet th Tf. thet h plunder was te object of the sien versa as no article of med - that thrown down n upon them by the thaw and the conse- quent ii influx of water on bas country, the flood 8 a passage ert. gh o part, by “which a théladerable Y eiinte reached t! rent, and tended in great measure to produce the calamity. The in —. was adjou urned until the 3d of February, t Exchange e.—The works for the new ret f 150 hands employed, the pi om maa to the been previo rot bar oa in co nseque of the incle ing, "hes on his arrival at the door, waa voices, nme listen a value was tou oat young man, Rudge, or two, heard his wife say, ** Now, do t been taken on suspicion, but no motive can as yet be —zgive over—I expect my master home directly.’’ The signed for the commiesion of the crime. He declares his } man said, Oh, 2 ever mind him, he'll not come home nocence, but the j wilful | yet ; I don’t r him,” Kiar mal said, on hearing murder against him. this apa fad = e thought th here was i per inti- d rus shing ~—_ are ay f Mr. Holland at ‘Bonk, Sussex, a few A straggle ago, have at length been n apprehended. Mr. Holland was then took “place between ee and the j prisoner en his reaigiee "ep; his bed by three of whom stood over claring “he should never do h a kn ife ps iacesteeal lantval if He offered re- ig acs in to his assistance, but he was eceived a similar threat. ae f the ureau, and took out cas’ ount ¢ about 3007., when they posal Above 302. was re 5/. Hastings bank notes, and the chief and thrown on the nom mency of the w have va laced on 7 the pm to forma pear It is expected that her Majesty will lay the foundation- stone | early in rooker _ —On Thursday morning a fire broke out in Fleet- stree Bundy, It was first discovered by one of the City police ; h er of Police sg yar sigh rity pee, Dunnid Ede, on fasiak, he o in a situat’ tion to 0 prove that the parties had peng clothes with a e. Hastings 5/. not 2’ The constab pee ae piers ‘that he said, “ I have n ot le him with second im; I have rene it more by ngling than oy baa, asked the constable who the op 55 8 je n the priso whom he was striking, as the candle soner declared that he had no intention ae murdering the man, if d been bh character, after which a. went to iapioraes and syset the agora of the mo A man named Sm also in } if there ha light in the thought things would have terminated di iff inquest | was adjourned for further evidence, and prisover aroused the inmates, who s succee eeded in L escaping to one of the adjacent houses. guished the fire. pa = 8 The ces is supposed to be between ffi As, ts examination of the aeragi i Pid with oe ‘urd of Benj amin | Coope r has s bee progress esi er: e week. /4.—On the return of a fire-engine from a fire e€ magistrates have committed Wiutent ts for trial ; and tes.—The shop o Mis iss Hunter, Upper-street, the other prisoners _ have been remanded for , farther cans was br oken into a few days since, and a silver inquiry. with watch, spoon thi s affair, it is said that proof | has been earieey that stolen therefrom. —On Monday night, an attempt wi n-outs, f T. Platt, Esq., Brunswi which either of late or Ly a considerable period ast i square, by eke over the garden-walls of houses in =, taken place ce, has Lee rear. Having unsuccessfully attempted to force the shut- | executed, and ters of the ‘beck-parlonr, ee the plate and between Wilkins ws pishard of pace pone 300/. and ance — deposited, they tried the has taken place in one of Earl Lonsdale’ s Bera or oy staircase } barking of a on me invh pom alarmed ined family, i = thieves escape housebreaking assent jarrciagn Sup Senior obbery. athe Saturday morn- i of a collier oy ie lying off the stai stw: renten picked the body up and landed it at the om to await t! inquest. When the body w as found, one of the pockets the trowsers was i faside out, and the vee property upon leceased w few pence, a a han dkerc and an = coe was a H sa a —A gues as has taken place to con- stave ‘the aloption o of peers to obtain the privilege of nding n this a first resolution was pro- posed by Mr. Philips ML P. detailed the proceedings before the select eomapiline for. granting the Las bie of bo adin 1g in Manc’ chester and other inland towns. He stated Tuesday evening, as it was passing through a brook, one horses struck against a sub- ce in jag d the arm — h of a. female were expo: e engine-me josed t One of t n jum off, and weneght prose ‘of the ie the body of a young woman, which appeared as ae it had lain there oer two days. bcp were _ “ies of op ws from so sharp in: en: od Louveyed to to Wich ola, jet Sey it awa nels ds, and appeared in her usual health a spirits She left the house on Thurs- day morning ee tak ky and never came peek: The family became uded that she had fethrcied ¢ to Bi and showed that they emanated en tirely from parties in Liv 1 or London, whose interests would be damaged if this were made a bondin rt. He then pointed out | large cut trees me left temple of the head, from which blood flowed. His ts were marked ‘* Capt. Cols, Leith.”’ = 7 gan gave rise to painful ru and the that de ceased had robbed Soe mu ore Red It appeared, ss ag at “ ribet § that it was an acci- dental death. a ms | Probincial News. Nebos. ntion in our ie. a public dinner took Saar at ‘which Mr. O’Connell was present. The great feature of the would result from the alteration, and his intention of supporting ~ sure declared was bas a Np by Mr. Labouche “Various Fr tion: © the advantages which wastl accrue to } Man he: er from the —s were pret) and petitions to both hous: of parliame t agreed to Li 2 that +} _ ridlin receved of the oe . loss “of the sc the Hunt f Su nderla nd, wi Mr. Bourne, of Dalby Park, has been totally Only a few = ~_ valuable paintings | library were hh —The Lords of the e Treasury have | decided mansion ef pene pith ee fire. and a tai of the North ne > the vessels comi: ng Take eli ase bee place near Inner Dowsing ##nds, some dis- ridlington Bay, about half aes 10 ° _ appears t the wind was rimo that the future land their mails at this port, instead of ’ Falmouth, in estward, and the anos Raosaresen . e Hu inter, which was a fine-built —n Boney the nist “gaaget and between the Radicals and the Chartists, fs ocisa yy on it is su , of the subject of Universal Suffrage. , Mr. oO’ ‘Connell’s Great Rapp are eee for the fe ss of seven or in =e an heat. "Tue wt 2 vessel was te peect these vessels, and there is was proceeding at of a Central Assoviation in London he pu e of | the Treasury = ped: the prosperity of the town. It similar rate. It tated there was a good look-out kept collecting inform: respecting t e seal cag and | is, however, d that many persons intere oe on both sides, out hat they did not apes each ot attributed the Reaeait occurrence of Missa demonstra- until within 200 ¥ yards 5 and altho oug h the crews em fions to the fact that the People, being unrepresented, have not Mr. Hum ee. Roebuck, and Mr. Co sequent adidceheod the meeting, in favour of roy union of fie mide and working classes. wever, understo in steam navigation are opposed to Dart that Marengo Rail ered as the = from Bir- Position, wished: to. see them making a purchase. | was losing his superb plumage day BY dar, and that bis minghen wat one Beef n Town to the pe was accordingly given to the authorities, who, fail, wien, i filo un hemes of. bah lume, was peel cede ce, “th e nchane endea- | after investigation, found that the case could not be sus- “Who have thus Yourel Kee den ally, but, in soneesnense t ; but after a reprimand from the merchant, and the | despoiled Ma cndiaed se tnng cotatea ¢ ma person of pery state the breaks had not the informa Sy pos jedaed: by her servant, she was | the regal bird? “Asuredly none of his co st effect. im proce -at inc sag ay the — feared him as as they Magee his acknowledged until it came in contact with a an on the line aordinany 2 —Last week when the Red a which saved, by 7 ite isterpeiee Pie te 1G pies yet : 5 Spe segue - pas- Born er f Glasgow, sm oe eee -agel Bs a om injery. The van re mas rien by the force of | be ane tie ae rse for Concussion off its springs; and. nee ae liguo ue oe tasting at ~—s st a oe got site ‘intox bs shattered to rade and fell asleep unobserved. When al urgh, a gent beside i i something JAN. 30.] THE GARDENERS’ excited the brute both with voice and gesture. wei d hap} ty atti rng its bold ee Ps prey, ye than ke was ei iPaigh custody as responsible for his cur’s misdeeds. Presuming, not irrationally, that the attacks from which Marengo had Leger lodged a Soupiaiot with the Procureur du Roi; and Ar- mand, the owner of the dog, appeared before the Correc- “<— ‘Teibsnal, ieee the 479th article of the Penal Code - put in force against him, by which cer- tain penalties are inflicted upon those who shall have ma- i or eger.—i wounded animals the pro bet ot of other g cock! Is h yes without the power to assist him. So Ip ant ted gal; in ambush, being consu eniy Suspicious yer there was he eye, and what should I see but this rat "3 dog, which was proc eeding to strangle my cock ! e to the dog. had hunted hae im and his master. I suspected that they were running after my c os os hens. But on that day my poor Marengo, the mas ock of all the world, was stretched out almost scakacbhes his wings fluttering ervously, his eye turned in his head. I thou ght he was haven’t said how you gave me a : thrashing t that lasted en idnetes’ eger ena wretch, but I didn’t do it. All I did was to collar you, for fear ir should escape. “Aieead Speers A aa Raso mre fist, a little “drawing- room pet “He's ae pty fond « of a fan, that’s all. If net om the pedi the cock began to peck at him he er. aaa tri could I have in i ae —Parbleu ! ! you wanted CHRONICLE. 79 ‘the evidence at the trial —The a however, considered that the matter had been correctly left to the jury, and saw no suffi- cient tsgene A _ ntl as nate Ps NSO k the benefit of the wi e- qui Sir Thomas, immediately resold i lea pipe; at this plan been in numerous in- and it was stated that thi mien por in order to raise money oe ine erate de- clared that he was at the time selling Ww t that pric: = | arent of attorney had been taken for the loose, and fadgme nt pon entered u it before the biil became ie ue. The Commissioner disallowed the claim on the plea of usury, but gave the party leave to produce other ra Knt.—Insolvent described him- and was opposed by Mr. Hail and or - ated that a was ealentet at St. _ mes’s a fact to which he would ar, had also lived in-other places, mane = ot tell whether or not he had borrowed money, as the was so far back. de- nied that an] O U shown him ons in his handwriting; at all évents, if it were so, it "had slipped his recollection. He had bout town for some y: » and had no recoll n that he wi ked for hismoney! He had been Naples, Paris, me, and other places, and had been for some time connected with the Critic magazine. e had “‘ banked”? with M . Far- quhat for some time, and =f the bankers’ broke; ut two months agvin the Fleet mr it was in 1-36, but he ee F Iasi had no account at any ban! ker's w @ CO! ee Hall. In 1838 his receipts woe ean, and 27 It nde th Sieur Armand ‘was “ pulled ap? "in the pe instance, but and th ‘ocate demanded only the application of the art ‘cle cri minal Boag which has iggy to the ‘alicio injury. Bu tt e fact ts adda ced i vidence not suffic ciently es hl 1 t Fruits A Marriage —An elderly i deal pee home, which he had me.—At an inquest held ‘tis week, Mr. Wakley, the coroner, said that the be written in’ full on the inquisition paper by the jurymen. There was an old sayin a oe ts = Semarapeint was pgm ” but it thought that h ery m nted ome,” for some persons 5 aie and at an niogust he had recently are only 3 jurymen out of 1 could Mr. Wakley, after these observations, signe his own n and han mhke gener r to the jury. See at one ©: old gentleman detained it longer than he thonght necessary, he asked him the reason, when the juryman exclaimed, ‘‘ Dang it, I’ve done it at last ; but I’ve been 8 used to sign my name, which is Benjamin, ‘ Ben,’ ”’ Common PiEAs.—Power of a or to Arrest.—Glynn Houston, Bart.— +i; was arule ‘tra a gett trial in an action of Sault and false im risonment, tried some tim: nt home of soldiers to search plaintiff’s house. Actordiogty the house was surrounded, and plaintiff himself, o Sora iar “ to ders. This t that th is! ape Se governor the illegal ily ; that the jar x a dosiies ee that the damages ae bot ¢€ stified by o: m the a geethd soldi the governor; and, jean hay that if if it Were so, Sir W. Hous ton was _—— by the order of the of State, ps ds search to der made, as $ secreony refugees, iromenae to invade Spais, with which Great — and rela proved: eich capa for ls obedience to that aes after he made the purch Edinburgh. to bail i in this Court, with a promise to add 2/. more permitted to justify. H married man, but se Bhi * Nha pg LB act gs with him at hoanawe, bas she Boyd. One of the creditors stated the pa: ticulars i airehages at periods when he considered be was dealing with “*Sir William Boyd,” the friend of Mr. Hume. After some discussion, the case was adjourn: te to. amend the in- insert rve several creditors with no- with remainde! bis fant son, the Marquis of Worcester, i ail male, and subject to a term of 1 years in t tzroy r d Lord Granville Somerset, which i e mi wood for wi ki Alderton Grove, of Mr. Neeld’s Pree! Ba ge ob be? should like take in exchange, as it bey. close to his sion. In'the month ary following, Mr. eile hao to the Duke Mr. Neeld’s reply, that Aldert was included in his ma settlement, and that he had ection to ask the consent of his wife’s trustees to her parting with it. The Duke now declared he considered the tran Duniey Gors id paid no more attention fm the month exchange for such other lands of an equal yalue within me Ss the commissioners might consider jeatrabte ‘er him. It appeared the commissioners’ upon this consent re ceeded to declare the iS awe Ste and awarded Dunley Gorse Mr. Neeld, who entered into possession of it, and ad ” new a) his : Kel Pcorerer th circumstance Sadminto ado m riding ee ae hiass ye of Mr. Neeld pes d up the erwood. A great deal of correspondence ensued. At length oe Duke brought an ejectment to recover possession of the Pe age cob os Neeld, and filed this billto restrain the action. On Mr. N it was the by Mr. Nenet om ont tor nk eens bef Nk a ai gern ong and t thi ent signed by himself alon inoperative, although the Act of ¢ for life to consent, for that the recarious Duke was not in fact tenant for life, but had only a pr estate determinable on the wi e tees.—His Honour sai : was av sag Bs .s e assume the Duke was enant for life, as the es isturbed hi It bana Pst upon the section of the Inclosure Act that had been referred to, that the Duke had a power of giving his Suseires’ Comes — Pexjury.— Nicholls v. Blo woveht to recover the sum of iek. 1s. 11d, Pn th miant.—The pode word that of the airy, nephew of defi t. on a visit to his u n oth Nov. He remembered plaintiff coming into his uncle’s shop on the evening of that day. when he immediately asked for the amount of his bill forleeches. De- fendant inquired how much it - Plaintiff replied above 10%. His uncle thought it could not ich Plaintiff said i: e would let him have 10/. he would feel much obliged. ectify any ere when he went home, and. send i lad TOSS: €X : I never said when the writ.that I pec Mr. Blomfeld. I never that the house was lined wii rits, or anything to that effect.—Hemry Lee. 0 particu icularly fro 5s. peg the oe for which date: mdant ga (The cet was then produced.) It was dated 30th Nov. 1840. amined : He bas hem ddenly taken ill in Fenchurch- liance was t — first witness, he wo! lad who served the writ, who would positively contradict a of his testimony.—The clerk te Mr. Arden then swore that the first witness, Quarry, when he went to defendant’s residence, represe! Mr. Bi ld, and said that his Hound with writs. ox worse be Fa. ‘the learned Under. Sheriff said. that it was a very us question. It was-quite clear that one or other pe the Hho could not escape something very - ; manliand jury found for the plaintif— Damages, 101. ‘* Police. dergone se N-H who sone upon ‘guneeer 6 of f uttering forged "tehes to Slarge harles Chapell, co Beers He 3 and e said apone hould go 12a Bert time, and | coos = wit- went away, h sath nch; he is a sonra. and description in his house he party from whom im you pars Vv 4 did, and’ pointed him out accordingly; and whom should I point if not to the gui erson? Mr. Flower—And you did not know that the notes were forgeries till y Pps taken Ete bey ‘ody that ?}—Witness— t certainly I do amen Et amped owner of the gaming: oe se, Stated esent during seal | netics the apd Pate ote m bis ge rockers mpson, “he Aa ever indicted !—Witness—I was: for kee ing 8 pane ir. Flower—Were aais Dak me or cheating itness—Certain Flower— hhoaed did they do with you? Did bres you ?—Witness— I was convicted, and“had twelve months for it. Mr. Bodkin— Pray, do you ever lose, Mr. Thompson? ee acaceec es, Oh, yes. seid Flower—Very seld fest —; beth: ace others to go on, you may depend upon it.— —Mos irons think so, but they are Puditere.— It was peRhe gps on the ae tot the Boston and other country banks, that the notes sworn to as having been yarious plates, rendered, by a chemical process, described umber of this Paper, capable of bearing ink stated that the notes Bice pee oe demned his conduct in engaging in so tnfer and romised punctuality is the payment of the shri —The ec bore ayor said he felt satisfied, from the admission of prisoner ad e paid ious notes. hicdon re! cashed pound renee which the ‘gentlemen rome tie table had w the prisoner, at a pronase nt of two shillings pew paptwientrn 4 inet for ety forgeens— Bie List: was a a rit for trial. asec oe M. 8. Stewart Wallace med on ber occa. ne of ‘he. Bencoulen, stated that vessel came ia and arte off Cuba. m board th continue in her, am ig to go to sea a 80 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. he meant to lose the v tr _ é colpeei tice Wal bension, he admitted that his poner s the person concerned fo this bg ope and by hae had ied him fee i it. sel.—W, N eae a ship-chandler, d Walince after his apore. a oa - ts of the captain sould ide their ae a0 See oe Sranaiported | and that they had gold t unt m: 17002, which was changed for notes at ‘ sugars in the Ma nation.— Thi h dence from the = se, that the gocds so insured nev were vn board that vessel, which was chartered from Bri LI ly, and from Ulanelly to (0 Valparaiso. With the exception of aeargo of coals at le of » barrels of t, anchi » amountin: actually insured at Glasgow and in London, and to the s amonnt ; so that they i twice over. He Latta bescate that none of “ota ever on board t essel at all, and should the ask ‘for t time for the p ver enabling im to complete ring .—Mr. Phillips objected to a re: d next session, and said that if the prisoners were committed at at the decided against the application amstances he should remand the prisoners Satarday. It is stated that, by the exertious of the solicitors for i has been laid ro- perty to the amonnt of upwards of ony E gt Indeperdent Assurance Company. — as made by the proprietor of No. 27, Baker. Cet, respecting by ante of 1 oo house to the Mindlesex Insurance Company. The whole ef nected with the ont last edi ie and apvli the lease ; he was des’ € said, knew uch. distress which had been hn egeors d that it was. indéed a melanc’ affair, but he could n "aon bead A istance 7 nt. QuEEN- Psapp ares ad Butiock— inspector i - plied to a for advice under the follo cigeuae, s 63 —, bullock, brought up by the Birmingham railroad, bad esea: od fromthe Malan hee aused great damage to several persons. down Park-lane at half-past ten on Satur. day nigh tossed a female a - of nearly twenty feet, and she fell ith such violence as to. fracture her He genti in a gig drove up zainst him, and i back. The womaa was conveyed to St. George’s Hospital in a dangerous state. Th bie then made his Way in:o Oxford. o the shopof Mr. Gilman, an oil- 4 e animal, efter much difficulty, was ppg in Albany Mews, when it was barricaded inz bat a — only had e elapsed whe: a the anisial sgaiss Broke loose er-square, and made Soate, big he did consi. entered the the | bare to his ces ‘Of 381.7 The a: pagis! Jetisdiction, oe Oxford street,” qutired s Ww ie was bm hick Se Crees 2 t, the amount of wiich was formed the applicant that he eae him ¢ iS -atrori al © forw: la: Hf asy pers bad seen he would hear him. A police cunstable then on daty in Park-lane when the female = ‘emple was lacerated, and her skull fractared. He had inquired < the hospital — found she was in a hopeless gt A drover, got him into Denk: a, Westone: and “a eM me “iva a him secure by placing: = — carts before him, wh a sudden the infuri- ated rst through a door, and mie its escape, doing a great rant = amades The magistrate repeated that the beast must be detained for the present, and regretted saa he es — do had 2 i th passed i in the _ and 2d William LV., for the comm an ‘ission whereof any penalty is d upon any such driver or conductor, and not upon the pros . r of oa cal e, and such-driver or conductor sh r be produced by such RODEO e ‘or con- ductor of th rri at the time when such offen com- mitted.”—' Magistrate inquired if Mr. Beard wished any time given him to pay the penalty.—Mr. Beard replied Tt was ni place to dictate to the Magistrate how he should do his busi- ness, but he refi to pay it. e Magistrate then said he should issue a distress warrant against his effects, and th ter might resist as he thought fit. r. Beard might prosecute him for doing so if he felt any inclination, and - (the Magistrare) would de- fend it with pleasure.—Mr. Beard, having aanins ao peated that ane law could not compel him to pay ‘this aver ft the office, an directions were given to issue a distress w Se etd Uist: 2 bccn LL’s.—T The few Derby bets e had ite “iofluene e — will be e found to hae retty cl r last re P; (taken. 1000 to 15 — Nebros (taken.) 450 to 50 ee een s and igo (taker. ) le colt. i wan ee 1 — Prince (ta xen AZETTE OF THE WEEK. ery wire-draw aaa — on, Chester, gr » Gray's-inn-road, hou Iebone- street, cheesemonger—d. “Mt. Srixcan, Tavis street, Covent. garden, ame “Niassa street Middlese: Wells, plumber, umber. —F. M‘Nein, Clement’s-lane, gene and E. Butr, Mortimer-s' ie lien drapers.— koe Heiston, Cornwall, grocer.—J. NC Somersetshire, cattle-deai aier.— W. ‘arr, near D Y, Yorkshire, woollen and scrib- bling. allies —J. Pou 9 SOM, pine hoagie gr he pecs orgs co ort, Haverfordwest, se: —J. urham, ay, Eaton, grocer.— ham, baker. — E. PUTLAND, Mauc hes ‘p- builder. Foi and mantactarers—J. 3 _ BainsroW, ay pire Sapir -_—J. No K and J. oodhouse Leeds, stuff dyers vA. CHALK, “ge tpt ag Vania: road, bill broker. ae M. Mitts and rdshi Li Stationer.—a. D. Borr: street, i OMLEY, Gracechurch-street, —H. Norracs, ‘er =a eget gr aed bay eet —E. Sencwan7, — » Lincolnshire, grocer.—G. Couzs, Southampton, c: BANKRUPTCIES ANNULLED.—T. Boots, Bradford, York- shire, innkeeper — Seem ascansecs Edward-street, Portman. sq., SCOTCH SEQUES —A. Muurcax, Gi aszo' ther-seller.—J. ;ertigs Rainer: ‘ont Tuomsox, sbaver pool, wool-agent.—Joun Syme, High-street, Edinburgh, d a Biarss.—On the i6th of November, at Her = ee the Duchess Sforza rites oth mst. pst, at , the lady ngram, Esq., of New Broad- London “to Helen, pong et = ak seni ra, of Elgin. — the 37th agg at am Bishop. pig angus ae moa iid ¥. Littlehales, H. A. 8. Payne, Esq., of Hutton io Kat third i daughter at ?. Fry, Esq.,.of Cor ictober . Lothian, in. coo hemes at ‘his mother’s residence in Crater: Street de Burt, eldest son of the late Rev. C, A. Burt, vicar of og lease and chaplain. ‘I HE A pe yaa iy: eng for or FEBRU: co rate ge NS ph ia EN i t to Fruit Borders ; prt sep sae oF on as ee as Sur face ¢ Heat from the ‘ sam: heati —The Chinese, or arf, “ome ; Granae dilla; Chi “gs ae ine-a ; Cucu vole? ; Vine; Forci’ trawberries ; Forcing Shrubs. phe at or ‘Plane and Sections.—Mr. Glendinning’ 's Opinion of Mr: Corbett's Mo ode of Heating by hot Water,—On the Cytisus Adami, or Purple e Labur. aum. Florticulture.—Botanical, Florticultural, and Arboric icultural Notices of the kinds of Plants newiy introdaced inte british Gardens and Plantations, or which have been originated j 4 them, his . Horticulture.—On the Culture of the P: i F. mparative Results fr elery. Bee Culture. improved Mode of etanehing Sea- kale oa oon om cultivating n —Remarks on placing the Entrance to Bee-hi ves. Reviews.—The Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society | of England.—Link, Klo ndol rum.—De Candolle’s De seriptir aa gh’s Hints an Ess: ISCELLANEOU from Metallic Wi ré of Exotics. Sending Cuttings by Letter. Amount Sot Instruction Noe of the Titl e 0: as a Branch ot Popular Educ E Hlbeigh Notices :— Russi: in Courland. mies th ‘America. mestic N Cypéras path ‘Coiens ta bero Retros: ici —The Curl in jotzsch, alia Otto’ 3s Icones Iw —General Not Tad ‘iad “Buber Pavement. Plantar taram r, m Anemology Ga rden Cul eS: England. ‘Gbreus Northumberlandia and ‘osu: ~ Chat worth Conservatory; John mci ty Theobalds.—On the Na- tural owie’ st of ForestTrees 1 in the United ‘Tree,—The fos steed of East Pio. States.—American and U’lmas amie protect Forest-Trees from the Ra. . bits the Leaves of Vines. "HE AUSTRALAS! TAN, COLONIAL, & CENSOAE LIFE yocterge and baie ye gon MPANY Capit fg 5d TOR! Edward act Esq. Cc: angles, Esq. H. Buckle, Esq J. B. ro anetyarg Esq. John Hen ots pper J, H. Ravenshaw, Esq. Gideon Colquhoun.) jan = Bs. Sir James Stirling John Edwardes Lyall, William fr, E von RUSTEES. Edw a, oe Thomas Richardson, Esq. Join E Henry ry Capper, sq. 3 tps “Toone . Doyle, Bt.; Chr. Richardson, Esq., Cornhill, Puysician.—R. D. Thomson, M.D., 20, MaNnac tages are offered by ‘Messrs. Swain, Stevens, and Co, a Te NKERS.—The Unioa Bank of Londo ho Gower-st., Bedford-sq. . GeR.—Major J. A. Willows, E.I.C. Service. : Secraerary.—Edward Riley, ‘y, Esq this Ateoviatida aap bd teri favourable rates, calculated witi reference to Aus- its. tra‘asian investmen Participation in profits at the end of every fi All the customary varieties of accu aenodenion ppd — deseendin licence te g Seales ; a a0 ns — proceed without S 5 rhea: ORC. years. oe ded by as- reteation of one-third extra charge to other parent naling in India assur n moderate terms. Specimens of tre Tecate. payable for ie Assurance of £100. Age.—An va rremium. 20 2: ay | 10 | 45 50 zs ars el d. akan 3, d. es a. ale 8. de rw s|iimil2 o 2-77 0] 23 ate 6 118 Specimens of A: ‘Atmuitiens a for every £100 invested. Age. | ee m | See | a2 70 Male 16 ort 8 3 ; 3. 641 3415038 Female 36 6 94 18 2 4 4/9 9 0f[1328 zs RISTOPHER aa USINS, Dee AT ad ce Made Mal EW GARDEN NET, 1fd. per Cur , Bishopsgate-street, London Squai rd, Ya made of Hemp by apne so one inch mesh, for Presert ae a Trees from Birds, Beds, i Goosebe d Currant-bushes, Tulips, also Woollen saad mare 36 meshes to a Ss, Metallic G ooden steps to Se oe Konbride: pace Ce Ov" the’ Jate Mr. G ed by Mussas — me SON, AND > OLIVER, ew Cross, uRy and Evaw Blight, Mildew, &c., &c. wrberry Bbens Frames, Greenhouses, | hee y- trees, ies, &e. 5 Pease, A Net se jaca wire, sia, “ea ace Linen Net, ranting Heap ie Soe ad $, Lombard weet, sereat in the a of Whitefriazs, i the City of don, and Published by them at the Ovrrex. Covent-Gaarpen, in the County of M ddic-ex —_ ort tisements and Communi wnications are to-be addressed to the Dake of Suseex, | § Saturday, January 90, 1847. rstreety nf eon TREETs 3, CHAR wore te aie Baitor, * THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. A STAMPED NEWSPAPER OF RURAL ECONOMY AND GENERAL NEWS. HORTICULTURAL PART EDITED BY PROFESSOR LINDLEY. No. 6. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1841. oF coma tuk No. 6. __ _____SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1841 ve aee ore er ee ee eset EK Se tne ie Wigs BO Tens os EA Oy glen ih sts PROSPECTUS OF HEARTSEASE. | NDID VERB 4 3 HE GARDENERS’ CHR 0 NIC L E; 5 Fs HENCHMAN begs to inform Cultivators of the lJ ILLIAM v1 ERY h has narewt a to announce to Heartsease, that he can now’supply, frem | gaan cwsire of his Friends and that he will have ready, sgpaneencay gh diey his fine Seedlings (including Robin Adair), ae ich we! o very | after the 12th of February, a Mpecont uperb bright Purple Ver- successful last year, at 3/.3s. Also 25 — med varieties for | bena of the habit of V.. teucroides, large spikes of flowers dening is admitted to be bet nderstood in Great Britain exhibition for 1/.—Edmonton, near London. and ar patra ery This variety = been greatly appre- are in any other country, ne rs “number of works on the tata “wideauie hee, tee ane cei a ciated by y of the most influential Nurserymen and Florists subject prove the patronage it receives, and the desire there is 1M ie NURSERY MEN, FLORISTS, AND OTHERS. | in ‘the vicinity of London. to extend the knowledge of its various branches. Many thou —Tw he Disposed of. with immediate * Dos session, the well- Ive also to ‘offer Verbena rubra, a beantiful dwarf sand persons are engaged in the paniaere ve Homcoiiure oehe | #pown NURSERY of Messrs, Colley and Hill, Hammers sant: i ‘echaine pn me bloom, and quite a distinct habit from m of existence, and a vast num! are interested in near London.—For particulars, apply on the Premi aint o or of Mr. any other. s. d. subject, for gardens are now an indispensable part of the domes- D. Dulley, Frotterer, thay nore a rden; and of Mr. Protheroe, | Verbena ee Iveryana 10 6| Verbena rubra elegans "3 6 tic re es ev 2 peeee ie a3 a Aga agen Auctioneer, 36 ae rnesii xh Spy No one will, therefore, dou eel tarsbie’ welunais mage Wie hs | meen ea ee te s to Wm. Ivery, Florist, Peckham, near London: or to rived from the establishment of a Jonrnal conducted in an honest — GILL, see ere BLANDFORD, | yy, ares 20 Wr ery, gore aig Seetdmen.” Ni sokaten: hese and liberal spirit of good-will to all, who are engaged or interested to announce to the Growers of Dahlias, that he intends oe. pase Ey reference or remittance to some respectable in Horticulture and Garden Botany, and who will thus havea onsieg out in May next, Plants of his beautiful SEEDLING | house in London. cheap means of intercommunication on professional subjects, Bb AHLIA, Am Rotsart.—Colour, blush white edged with purple, | RE em ae The plan proposed to be followed in the management of Tue | very high centre, throws itself ott 0 uket the fatiegey.0 delves H R. ee and SON, Nursery and Seedsmen, GagpENers’ CHRONICLE, is in THE FIRST PLACE to make ita | improvement on Dod’s Mary, and fect show flow Tt has * Ealing, a, beg to off fer tothe notice rf their Friends weekly record of everything that bears upon Horticulture or | been approved sola ona ad areas growers ye com- | and the Public g nerally, the following Dahlias, &e. &c. : Garden Botany, and to introduce such Natural History as has a | petent judges —Plants 16s. Gd. each. Fama ounce, oar: sorry shaded with li ght c crimson, a. relation to Gardening, together with Notices and Criticisms of iT ake Catalogue of all the leading Dahlias may be had on fine cupped 3 - 10 6 every work of importance on the subject which may appear. | applicatio: A fine hea ~ bee ot pote! and mgr Aponte in | Fanny Keynes’ (Keynes” haded, e cquisite fi rm Connected with this part of the plan will be a WEEKLY CALEN- | high state eer cultivation. will receive the it prompt (see Keynes’ List) - 10 6 DAR OF GARDENING setae adapta — enin great detail,and | attention —Blandford, Dec. ie oi Constancy (Keynes’) ), shad ‘ded purple, fine (see Keynes? List) 0 6 so adapted to the varying seasons form a constant assist- | =~ 7a Sper ee ee ee King of ee Thomson), delicate rose, beautifully formed 10 Sate ance to the memory—Foreign and: Domestic Correspondence OT-WATER APPARATUS FOR caged ha rid general € ue of ‘Dahtias can be obtained at the Nu upon Horticultural subjects —Keports of Horticultural Exhibitions BORTICULTURAL BUILDINGS, DWELLING- HOUSES 5 foe Son ro this opportunity of mentioning that they bare hare and Proceedings—Notices of Novelties; in short, everything that | CHURCHES, and MANUFACTORIES, upon improved prin- very much enriched their collection of Heartsease, by the addition can tend to advance the profession and benefit the condition of | ciples, and at very moderate charges, erected by DANIEL and | o¢ many very fine varieties. They have well-established a of the workman, or which may cenduce to the pleasure of his em- | EDWARD BAILEY, 272, HOLBORN. that most beautiful en ifiora, at.15s. and 21s. each. ployer. Thus the Gaxpener,the Forester, the Ruran Arcat-| D. and E. Batey having devoted much time to the considera- | 4)<4 several otter new and good Greenhouse and Herbs rect, the Dratwea, the Rouan-Maker,and the Corracer, will all | tion of this subject, and had ruch experience in the erection = Plants.—Jan.3 have the improvements ia their respective pursuits recorded. apparatus for the abavelmedticned purposes, have, by improv. perenne stan a is oe ieee py com is in many venpdaaein’ Aten creating an Arrt- | ents suggested in their practice, rendered their mode of heat. G ERANI _ MS, CAMELLIAS, RHODODEN- Ficiat Cutmars, similar to that-in which plants are naturally | ing not only very efficient, but very simple, and have combined DRONS, &c.—A. J. STEWART, of Savt-wint NeRsery, found : evidence, however, regarding the real nature of climate, | durability in the app»ratus with economy in the charge. ‘They | near Windsor, begs most respectfully to offer the following in as concerns veg! in, is greatly wanted. have erected apparatus in England, Scotland, and Ireland, for collections viz.— C any noblemen and gentlemen, and have had the honour to be Geraniu ms, 20 20 good di net sorts Re Ore PHYSIOLOGICAL INQUIRIES, and all those interesting to Ae by the Horticultural Society of London, in executing 20 Very nr sianiond manta ibe eas which. slaciiase Heer’. cc herons 800, the dependence of the works of their splendid Coaservatory, lately erected at Chis- perb, new, and distinct vgoite «ace se the —_— mina the creation each on the other, will also form : Camellias 20 whens distinet var 50 0a re ™D. and E. Barzey also construct in metal all descriptions of gemma snug tee ee _ Another pecntiar feature will be the introduction of informa- Horticultural Baildivgs and Sashes, and ‘invite mohtoone, gentle- 2 Ta extra a fine, new, and distnet d-. $ = ih tion relating to FORESTING, or ARBORICULTURE, This is one men, and the public to an inspection of their drawings Rhododendron cum, 20 Gnine nanied hybrids 7.10 of the most important subjects to which the attention of the pub- and models at 272, Holborn, where they have teed pc eg od of | Bextra fine Bie Tg lic can be directed; for it 1s often little understood by those who exhibiting, amongst other metal works, an extremely complete | Roses, standards, as 98 grod ai job <5 have occasion to practise it, although the amount Of property | and convenient kitchen apparatus, or range, adapted for the con. | ae ven Seen ieinet kinds 319 affected by the management of timber stands second only to that tinued supply of hot water, and an arrangement of the oven e drat rate dhetinct 3 ; of | ral Tay 4 ich govern th eee tim- | more complete than has hitherto been brought before the public. Cape Wties, 12 cond Wee dercoving = BOI nag z ber gulate its growth, the value Be it, the extent to hich D. and E. BatLey were the first to introduce metallic curvili- Greenhouse Plants, 20 showy and cissimilar s spe cies : ° it js Influenced by sail, ee aa teas y to what circumsta near houses to horticulturists, and can refer to the Conservatory | 0 very fine and distinct do. . 3.10 tre to. be anctig Phe great inferiority tnt qualkty of the Gamé xpe- attic to the ie Pantheon as one of their works, besides many | Ghent Azaleas, 12 extra fine varieties, set for flower 210 cies grown in different places, are ali points to wh: attention | others in this and on the Continent. | Ficotees and Cifnations, 12 soperfine named éorts bins ven. Weshali rene ps : to collect information upon | ————_ asi ae AND ee | T pain of eceh : Ss a Ae that very :mportant but much-neglected subject, the diseases of HORTIC ae BUIL | 7 is trees, aud the cause ot their decay, whether natural or acciden- H poy TE 2 = o jeri for packing 1 is incinded to fhe above amants. a tal, as well as to convey the earliest notices of the introduction of — Co ARCHITECTS, &e., GLOU- | ~ car Ph 4 : new species, which promise to increase either the beauty or value «CES hey KING'S ROAD, CHELSEA, ease weiss = and proweny._.Yensn Lol joao) = gqamticie see Aas wh a WILL | Hothouse Builders and Hot-Water Apparatus Manutacturers, b CONSTANTLY ON SALE. AT THE % : bers ere, pholidate hd th sted Cal PAs. TOS THE | leave ——_ the attention of the Nobility, Gentry, and ‘Horte | Litoree OVEN COKE WoukS, pine goad Abbe Rite ten: nag =e culturists, inspect their premises. -where may be see 4 one om Coxz, for found:i¢s, lee es, detail: oe “AGRICULTURE. ye we ie pack our co aamas-vith the riety of H oreuiaral Bad eng S Lena ote principles. = ecw | e there is a strong ees Far es t would bei mosh, ° if ote OM, ae Of | stock of For , Glazed Lights, and cther Horticultural | “Coxe, to household purpeses, steam engines, Boilers, Arnct's phere ah eat eral peach Giles sease Hi to the is ars ee Ge pence always ators TeMay ma ae. and other stoves, as well as for open fires, particular’ iy kitchens,’ tanks whethan i cae gee Perietecae Wh ee of | " ‘Pheir Hot-Water Apparatus, which is kept in actior, is upon } making a brizht clear fire, without, smoke, and yielding more’ ae fest be found im Ptent in that respect to the Farm, there- | the most simple and economical construction. References may | heat than evals ee eet ts a pir A wee pee armer will | be had and their works seen at Mrs. Lawrence’s, Ealing Paris ; Caxnen Coke, peculiarly adapted to the patpiene of I'me- OS, essrs. Henderson’s, Pineapple Nursery, Edgeware-road; Mr. | burning, conservatoric=, hothomses; &e oo tae FLOAT ST our Miscellany will have much interest, not |. Gaines’s Nursery, i rsea; Mr. Knight’s Nursery, Chelsea; | ~Suaex (or Small Coal), being the cereenings of the best coal. and not the Parties se acoat-yard. Vhis es cam because everything relating to those rare and beautiful eg Mr. Catleugh’s Nursery, Chelsea; of E. Fanster, Es be: ai 2 of used for vai ime purposes mixed with coke, it forms an excel-- ‘de> ductions which are his peculiar care wii be constantly Lodge. Windsor; Sir “Edmund Antrobus, Cheam; and at their ner as to make him thoroughly acquainted t with ee Manufactory, Gloucester-place, Chelsea, near | lent and e ical fel for steam. ‘and boilers, being, of pa pf 2 ‘ ; of new sien ees a yor agen modes | Sioane-square. ;9 quite as = weet as peg large-sized coals, at a for wad sad toed itivation, but also because ake c: at sach. |) ——— ire opinions as may be given are the results of an honest cnanina 6 ge GREAT CHATSWORTH CONSERVA- | ween tone h eure doors wi witout for wood a — y competent judges unbiussed by personal interest. TORY.—One of prs ene ae features i in she er | PR icherercens FOR CAS -— t . NTHE SECOND PLACE, we shall introduce that description of | of this wate mserv: , is the entirely. ne Oven Coke, per ton - 40.0 . domestic and political News which is usually found in prpywed = Glazing adopted axes ec. Its pore dae novelty and aoaiy pty oo “8 Coke, per cl ears « : » 19 0 paper. We consider it unnecessary to dwell omthis head further | pearance are acknowledged ; and ap now undergone most | Cannel Coke, so rchelation bea 5. pe, 168 than to say, that we do not intend to range ourselves under the | satisfactorily ali the various trials to which every alteration | Slack (or Smail-Coal),pertean. 17 H banners of any party; on the contrary, our best endeavours will | of Season and temperature can subject it, its success as an expe. | Japan Varnish, per gallon 2 be to make Tus Gaapsners’ Curonicce a full and comprehen. | riment may be canine as complete. It has established its great | Coke saad Slack dehvered w-thin five miles of th e WwW Mf at 3s. sive Recurd of Facts only—a Newspaper in the true sense of the | Superiority to every other method now in use, both as regurus i per ton or chaidron.—Jap. 1841. Gen. Younc, Manager. word—leaving the — er to form his own conclusion and opi- | the Glass eat fo and the mode of Sieian. it, oar pr ie | tet A _ done é quasi itity ef CANNEL Coan may aise now be bad nions; 0} 5 ‘ing the elucidation and discussion of advantages durability and exemption from these causes. o| 32 laws of nature, not sb a er will thus be provid: = | breakage dependant ston m weather, aod being beyond ail com: Se ccd iaaesinia Me chat ae S.GMA tes Beco Sabre So addition to the peculiar featureof the Journal, with such avaricty | Tison Bashseedt in the qualities necessary for the retention’ of | NEW VICTORIA RASPKERRY. : of information concerning the events of the day-as will supersede | heat and the transmission of light, the work at Chatsworth may | OHN ROGERS, Florist, ke. to Her Majesty, H.R.HS the necessity of providing himself with any other Journal. be safely pr biinee need to bean sree co resin most perfect system the Duchess of Kent, and 11.R.H-. the Duke cf Cambridge, &c. The proprietors are apoy to announce that they have already att Horticulteral st that has yet devised. | | Eaton-square, Pimlico, and at sattersea, begs to offer to the Pai op promises of contributions from great numbers of their = OSEPH DRAKE, §, = et street, we, Sree ee | Nobility, G entry, and others, a new and s saperb Se Z gee e and supporters: am more igeware-road, London, hom the execution of the Chats : particularly named :-— oo rae ements worth a was ere — fe honoured by sa eet the —. op from — Professor Danbeny, o | Professor Henslow, of of Devonshire’s entire a bation of the m: which it to? Professor Graham, Ed | Sir W.J. Hooker, eee: been completed: which Popercasnie his Grace with Royle, ot Ki rR The Hon. and Very Kev. W. Herbert, = © signify ae most gratifying testimonial ; abe 4 soliciting the | Se arker, Esq.; ingham | Deanof Manches| ention f such N : ‘doko tary of the | John Rogers, Dr. Greville, | ferner, Hull Mr. Bailey”. | Mr. Paxton, Gardener to the Duke of Bishop oY. the Arch. | | Devonshire we Cate, Ganienee te eee Be Mel ntes moa ardener to the Duke Duke rT jeush. My Modiee, Gardener the Norte Mz, Tillery, Gardener to the Duke of : r i fr 1 43 an iadumvoniie ct re. | wi Mr. Woulley. tacune tae 4 Mz. ewpipsan, Gardener to the Mar- | quired. Mr. Alleard, of Stratford Green, Essex, has a'so permit- | Ct Sutherland fi meiteesof Wetuninster the Duke of | t¢¢ J. Drake to mention. that on a ona erected for Lim | in-May | a Mi. eke oe ee to the? Bai Sutherland last, from a design of _ Paxton’s, and which was glazed by rd Fitawi ia Hi iad Mr, Frost. Gardener to the Countess | Drake with glass 44. inches long, not a single pane has been | oa ue Peale ae mer to the Earl a ine Yess. Gardener = the Bat bay ‘by tele sndden beep RS ecegay ee | ss cones eat epee ‘Mr. J. Wilson has in ali other ri merely. is expectatian a Mitchell, Garden ee gE sre Surge ie Ba Mar. Alicard: has also kindly permitted him to state that the vinery | at Mr ardener to Lord Car may be viewed. upon application to bis gardener, at bis residence | 3 E Rabees tine Bane ia Sir. ae Re Booth, avigem anja Aig ie, Lemen as queens and fig sen begs respectfully to add, that he shall Satwerp 1 Trae can be had at 3s.! Pht ae cM ia ee ‘o furnish Lists of Prices of the Glass, orany ¢ Gampbell, of the Botanic Garden | Mr. Cameron, of the Botanic Garden set joer arenes it may be deemed desirable to obtair, ———— 7 at Mancheste =" Birman Jermyn-street, Se 2 BE LET, 0 » On n the _ Hampshire enast, Mr. 3 . t ham r. amos, Zonlegical Garden, Man- | Ms. ie non, Curator slik hae pide application by letter, addressed to 8, 4 be jcaceepeneces: Mr aes, of the Botanic Garden | Mr. Niven, of t the Botanic Gard. SC MEE BEAT re ‘house, Hot house, and Pits; with Four Acres ef Land, nearly alk: ue won Bees 2 | ublin BRITISH SHEET GLASS for HORTICULTURAL PURFOS! walled in. — aptly by jetter to pote Was, Bramey, solic citar, aeaee =a ¢ Botanic Gar- “| =e the Botanic Garden at ma | No OKLEMEN, aig on and Povo Gray’s-inn-sq’ | Fi : t, a YO NG MAN who: Peete at 7 Bo chjection onto: towel er Co t to: HL ®B, Ro. 2 Oid Nerth-row, Ea:l's- penta , t — Dir og | e vr oO a Brompt ton, Middlesex “ae: for’ Lights or ner exe- | t 5 ie aba or large ) Ses | Putty, Prepared Cement, and Ee ade ONS AT E bly, ee ‘OF THE ORTICULTURAL L SOCIETY OF LONDON. for the ea crash competition, mo ~geeee being made between 1841. The Exhibitions will oe piece hy the following days,— and Priva’e Perso: a Saturday, May 15th; 3 Se oR Saturday, Jaly 10th. |. = calgon Ok Gidve “br green z E ts - ae. ie — | 1st} 2d] 3d} — libert Pp acnd panjecs for exmition, Society or not, willbe at | w. Cacti, tue tall kinds, in flower — | ist} ad] — it shall be reqwred, the Society will defray the X. Fruit, mi-cellaneous Semrgge vreae of, reasonable expenses ac scroaily incurred prone private growers in con- fereat en rele — role | veying objects to and trom the Garden, provided a detailed state- tari es Sheth joer eredasio ae ment of such expense. be delivered at the the Fruit-room in the ing only o ue kind = bret eaten ar ween the hours of 3 ant 4 piggy in the afesnpne of | y. Grapes Ist} 2d | 3d the day ot piste, the Bess ame signed by the exhi- | 7’ Bihera ne tame 3 at bitur as a ies Oe - -app: = Ist} ad | — AA. agen = r nectarines, in * dishes off agen Selecta FOR EXHI TION. —|—|—| Ist | 2d i e add A ested to notify in writing, pr BB. Very aye stare ove single Specimens | . ously to the day of meetin, what they intend to supply, in order of sagen tal plants, whether thar due iv y he mae tor the proj iow old ae firwer « — | — | Ist} 2d | 3d the plants, &c. « ibition. The cc. as, dpisitodos wal new ornamental secured for those who comply with this request. nts. io edals for these As the Gard ill be o ened at 1 for the ission be £ entirel its at the members, i: that the judges should proceed to co: discretion « of tthe Lee = =f — sider the merits of th- exhibitions - 11 a.m., an nd it | DD. Misceila.eoas subjects of ent. is absolntely_indispen-able that the rabies should be in order b: tural process pot compe Thended | that time, it! as been determined that no path vont for exhibition under any of the foreg: ing heads — list! 2a! 3a = admitted into the Garden aft past 9 o’clock in the | “phe Juuges hav f increasing or diminishing the pansies ran eens te sin the Exhibivon-tent at = ther and “alte of Sita fered by the Suniety fur cepereenine . jects, 10 0! in cases pol ns ad nach epoat or boxes must be excladed fro: ulations, if they itsdestrentatt ns : All specimens, whether of frnit or flowers, will remain y absolute directions which the Ju touched until after 6 «elock, when they wil! be delivered nes me Connell are. , to bear in mind that the Suciety’s Me the hani's of the exhibitors, who are most poets requested offered, not ovly for new and curious obj-cts, but for remark- Not to give away their cut flowers in the! much confa- able + imens uf Horticultural the etek Bo oceasio: been prodaced by that in instituting these meetings being not merely to encourage ADMISSION OF &XHIB: gel amas Collector, but more especially to rew: the success of the f or persons required to assist in bringing skilful Gardener ; and -econdly, N r AKE ANY AWARD the a CMintie oth be eamitted. sa heretoliry betes | 29, CALES,W DERE, THE PRIECTS EXHIGETET DO NOY half 9 in the morning at the Carter’s-yard entrance . R WOR OF A ysenry otherwise a baw single Every principal exhibitor jects fur which me exhibition may obtain a prize. mer y because there is no better ally «fered will be turni-hed with ome p.ss-1 icker, whicn | €xaibition of the per sass to oppose Ik MISSION OF eke ah sting p The sais opened on h day, to Fellows and to Visitors, at Que o’clock, ree the eine Tac mk ae All Fellows er the society will be —_— pas baka sages tickets, the here. Exhibitors: re-enter the Garden after! o'clock, when they from One till Six @ciock, on signin; will be required to produce their pa-s-tickets at the Carter’s- yard gate, every time they pass or repass. the evtrance. : i FLOWER. NDS. Visitors can Pr beeqie only by tickets, to be obta:ned through Provision be made by the Society for placin; the tables | Fellows of tue iety. c may Ax hice tag but as some rellows wno shall y on or before Tuesday the 6th of flow