7—1852.] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
the house would be sufficient to set all the air travelling. 
instance, a 2 feet cold air drain, which might drop 
CHRONICLE. 
103 
1849, pointed out that the two Ss both — . to 
* eyes and to the of the an 
which the first 192 pages, ee all the plates, relate to 
Ferns. The rem 
For i ol structur The e is occupied by descriptions of 
suddenly and not cause much disturbance of — nearest author then porised some e de ta 15 of min ee ce in supposed new genera and species er: A sabe bet 5 
alley, carried to the very bottom of such a roo s formerly given ; and after | the herbaria to which the autho 
I recommend, two 6 i eiers connecting this drain Matina — the specimens nor: 2 pr esent some which are many of of Caming’s Philippine 3 
with the external air, to "p or close at spe eeifie 3 „o 3 in the spe- 
leasure, a 4 or 5 feet circular opening to out the —— for procured at Ricliborougis ag 22 F 
ot air, close — to se h * of 3 feet — . he to name the pets which he now possesses, provisionally, LORICULTURE. 
oor; an not conceive any possible in on event of its proving to be sine. Anthophorabia SHOWING VERBENAS. — diversity of opinion ve 
failure. If ie be any exposed surface of boiling e . iat: Some account was oe giv n of the habits of | always existed as to the — t method of show 
might not = — have li over that with excellent 
tropical effect? It may b 
midt that no one need be — 
use by an idea — he 
sake of drai 
„that — 
cla — all along the 
e Ih 5 fe — Mr. 
Meek ‘himself. — 0. 35 b, 1847), — on a the question 
of drains “it may prove t that the fo 
employing is so extremely rapid in ien movements that it 
requires no assis our hands,” &c. 
Mr. Grey has nated nay your columns that he di dn 
provide an, t simply made an aperture to the 
lower part of the Polnaised stove outside his corridor, 
However, even after 
e 
1 should 
a 
s his se 
eA ders 
cond 
ready recorded), that there sts no 
perceptible draught within the house of air in its dese 
to the 
— and that at 4 feet from the ce 
air aperture the hermometer indicates 
7 
80 
l aeration 
would follow that if siii done 
an aceession of s rmth 
e of 
pipes, intern: 
qe Ee it 
own success, 
est impulse which I feel to 
memory of a ben tector to > his kind, who was 
removed pom this world before the. practical results of 
s labours ‘satisfactorily brought home to the 
ates 
isolated stoves; an e 
of, where the = air had egress by 
slit estal, and — — 
brought his 9 “ Polmaise ” 
= 
* N 
s has 
Xi > motion, 
omlig g = * the — n radio-thermal system. G. W., 
Sotieties. 
the 
chair. 
e gathered from what I have | show 
r of 
eare |t 
| favour, — are ‘really c of very great intrinsie excellence, 
on. | and, if th 
| country, until the een perso 
r 
| apart for t 
arees Tour, Part II. ( 
my Evans), mr = the delight of sporting 
in, | illus a are, we think, better than ever, if they can 
| the Best Authors ; vets Bite 
of | Companion Libra 
ustry. 
3 de was 
surface 
upon w of 
both . of — insect were exhibited to the Fellows at 
the meeting. 
Books, Ke., Receib ed. 
Murr — 70 Modern Cookery (small 8 vo, Murray, p 
675). — This is a new and better edition of the well. known 
work of Mrs. Rundell, witl 
improvements. I 
subject not only stand at the head 
he culinary art, which is not indeed sa} 
the p Prepare 
tion rs more of the —— vegetable dishes, w 
be complete. We fear, however, we must despair of seeing 
ea — in the houses of the e mi = classes of this 
education of the 
gi se 
Readin ing and cyphering are excellent 
branches of — but — — — make cooks nor 
housemaids. 
Notes, 
f | (6vo, London; Churchill, —The au 
supply of 
He would have the extension 
ns arrested, and 285 smer themselves gra — y 
— drt Then, having broken Great Britai 
into allotments, he would have lectures on science given, 
— e courses of instruction to ch as are 
si into i more popular 
rses are, however, is be given in the towns, 
arrangement which strikes us as mone eee with the 
other 2 — of 8 the tow Should the reader 
care to know ho halmers 3 these ra 
startling prepositions, he will of course procure the 
work a himsel 
coh On ganisation of an riain i ni ae for 
1 85 By T. Pri e 
attention of the p hilantliropist, = Hie est eg made in 
= — fig both rational and pra AB bil 
—— we 
follow. Gee “ee ion r 
n under-edu- 
rm 
cation, wasting their best time, and N them dis dis- 
l contented with the state to which it has pleased 
- | call 
Linn Vol Part 25 Halle, te oceupied 
by Lang's s account sf North E uropean Carices, which is 
now completed. 
Mystery of the Danub 
erbenas ; and we 
etance al 
are ws sur 
d | but 
e | fea pi at all our great flow This will n 
in bun 
Thoughts, and —— By Charles . | 
oses | thus — ly 8 instead of a perfectly flat surface, 
;| the des 
n up rim 
ther | is 
orking classes, well des avti 5 eee 
The | 
0 3 and Evan 
ing how, in the opinion of the honourable e ee 
ord Pa bin va ston has close e Danube, arrested e 
portation from Turkey, and Powter: the reopening of 
radbury and 
del men. Leech's 
be 
Collected Edition of the Bites of Douglas Jerrold. 
The gts ya a Feath 
The Ga . 
(Ato. Ore and Co. 
Mr. rington’s parlour aq 
ik of hy hybrid Heaths and Pempon 
Walpers, Annales Botanices 3 Vol. II. fase. 2. 
Half-howrs Ee, lish Hist night. Part IX. 
Knight's Pict hat sakes 
Pocket Mi 3 Vol. 1. "_ Knights Half. how 
of In 
a 
the like for ayaat a purposes saa real 
instruetion. 
Turner's Florist, No. 2 (Chapman and Hall), has 
2 figure of three varieties of Epacris, i 
e. By D. Pitt 
vans). 8vo. af — — wae show- 
y be attributed the sa apg ae 
to whi ch this er has faken with 
aot. This 
83 ere for brillianey 
variety of colours, it has fons equa 
in future m oe atten p pı 
— 5 value of the flower lies in its be hy aaa 4 
e trust ‘that it will yet sai ma consis an tura 
at 
ort ere by an exibition ot “12 
es” as isoften required ; 
—.—— in single trusses 
the habit is to exhibit — ee or Be en 
estio i o be We 
answer, in any way that displays its natural sil of 
gro farse 007 . = acco —— 2 by erect 
ni ng; ome trellis, which 
will best — — trailing pa . — habit of the 
d the 
plant „ at e time, display the largest 
amo bloo: All formality must be avoided, 
and as little restraint ap ible. This is the 
ho ropoli 
a the difficulties 
a 
ired end w ed by one in the 
form of a parasol, a 
the pot, tho growt may “ru perfec 
freedom ; a wire trellis shaped like a parasol, with its 
andle or support not quite in the centre, would 2 
the wants o 
ould be better attain 
ns are distinguished 
much for the — that Delonas to them as for their 
8 in othe 
ich you 
credit (if any) is due for first bringing them into notice, 
Since that — . has been by n 
see * 
18 
was this the case 
— Chambers 
th |i 
to the usual kind of matter for which this 28.4 
pae pami Rese 
ate of sd plan at periods subsequent to that of 
the first noti the North British Agriculturist. 
I should have left ‘tile gee notice, ves it not been 
that I — the plan be advocated at all 5 
might as well so in ita he rity. 88 
single = is onl part of the Rees thes it is e 
effect. You in the 
will see from the North 
British ae ist, that wires the 
socket, in num requirements of the plant 
it che 
to be supported, — ae only being made in the ball 
of = plant, . will supply as many supports as may 
; in fact, a sort of wire frame may be made 
pi have used them for Carnations for 
eina 
it is used with ; for , &c., according to 
the number of stems, I find (as well as your corre- 
it spondas „W. C.“) that the plan is dec — preferable 
to stakes. But I think it right that i 
ve | lity the 
hg — w whieh he 
— to attend to. Cuique Suu We learn by the 
e o paper alluded l to, that the originator 8 
uestion 5 K. Sivewright, Esq., o 
silada ne near ee 
in 
Exurpition Days Fir A 
) — 27, Aogust 245 ; South Devon : 11 is daly 
22, — 
29, “August 5 and 26, 
