46—1852. | 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
727. 
beerved by himself in Albania, as well as various other 
— ois ok pankata in the Hym 3 — — — i 
The ree gave amid account of M. chard’s 
work u e Organi of ri —— — 
some o . elaborate — of which were upon the 
te of an t 
te fly upon 
the eyes i — — mode of 
Lt * by — iwe of an open ne eil 
uche. Mr.S ree out tie sini “ine of 
this — of — to the plan adopted b 
ancient us detailed by Herds à — by 
the modern tatians, t set forth b e first 
volume of the Soc 
entrance of fice ia — apartments by hanging fishing nets 
at the open windows. 
Hotites of Books, &c. 
nd Ne re the a z the agma —.— 
Ol 
of shilling — pablished by Ch under 
the title of & Read g for . veller” is — ! 
— —— th 
ed, poetica and pre tical 
sola _ fatigued ith t Pak like a 
a man who has been condemned to 
in potations of France sant the Rheingau. Take for 
instance the following introdu Ne for matter: 
erhaps the very antiquit; 4 roads, 45 the wide 
erations compri the 
oe 
E 
123 
Sa 
© 
istory of pa is, in 
of civilisation F. 
in his being condemned to a long course of vegetable 
diet. For doubtless he gazed u at least four main 
ron hich e — the gre 97 Baby lon from four 
opposite — uarters 
ri- | fishes 
sactions — — the | vi 
y | poses at 
attention 
wo leading i 
ated by the one—the ce 
n Evander came as a 
t Palatine, . t not the 
Hy boreans nia = * fi, ie ‘hie, with 
each revolving yerr; owe mos mankind 
veyed 
n an 
of the Corinthian Isthmus, did he no 
ion-post, informing the 
' was is Peleponnesus, and that side was Ionia 
in W 
tri- early in Au 
races of Asia founded their the — shou 
ji 
da; 
setup a 
wayfarer that «this side | atm 
ait Centuries of 
80 
From W from Candaor east, 
art en to the 8 clits 
Of Caucasus, and dark Iberian dales 
From 1 aud nh ne ighbouring plains 
Of Adiabene, * dia, aud the south 
Of Susiana, to B alsara’s ha — 
W 
from Baiæ to P 
useless waste of 1 
that emperor ha Pe kward trick of hinging to the 
all persons wa did not 3 his Leg It 
was a bad im N of a bad model the with 
which Xerxes bridled the ee, Helen 
Both the Hellespontine and th rished in 
the lifetime of their fou —— — the ‘Sinplon still 
rac 
ya 
tthe Se me se 
a . 
i Gataia tiai of the Pyram 
need say —— more to induce our — to © 
We 
inquire after “Old Roads and New 
FLORICULTURE. 
from Christmas to June, 
Roads.“ 
— Te Crinerarta— Flowerin 
n 
and formi 
a ae whim ey teh road | ob 
of 3 fee 
p healthy pearl “lige. 
so furnishing a i 
50° they will be found to flower freely, and will be 
— useful: ats furnishing cut t flowers. Seeds 
produ: 
— vigo rously during —— 
When the beauty 0 of | the specimens is over remove the 
flower-stems 
A aceording 
compost tor the Cineravia. Fe r small plants leaf soil or 
sand T Ta may be substituted for the cow-dung. 
NE CHRYSANTHEMUMS,— 
w 
quantity 1 ‘clean sl sl arp san 
the loa 
expanding fio 
h I hay ee flowerer, and 
ble a as Pea of the — t double 
„Daisy. G. Dickson, Landen 
Pompones whie 
the bl 
1 jino 
orising Manure.—I will sta 
Deodo some curious facts 
which I have observed in ex: 
bouquets, which the Cineraria does, it 
be, as it is, one of 
ordinary m 
g the —— is v root suckers, 
— . abun lants after * — 
— poa in a shay seus tion and — — eA attended to 
ants shou Í 
e situa- 
some eames will 
wet the foliage any more than can be 
helped, and also to avoid cold curren ts of air, — — | 
and greatly inj | 
the Plain or down the mountain-gorge and the Regina 
ian Road; and centuries between 
ich marked out to 
and: 
＋ 
ledger, we would 
e evoke a 
l gladly ; — it at the 
ete of one or two Fathers F 
kse s 
of the Church: 
of its intersections ppa i of some effici 
— AA A e 
arieties; kee 
this enemy, ‘on ap ly appears 
the parts affee ted. 
8 
á confined over- moi 
1 00 i 
respect to 
2 ould be pot plenty of of say — room 
riod of fi 
ch pots, 
Phe 
j gre 
ouse, to some light airy situation where th 
will be —— from frost and da 
A 
=å — occupy an 
pee te it without bong exposed to the al theoretic brethren ofthe po s 
a get 
fees of doe: Mee 
ts fl 
T 
} 
ere specimens are wer 
ne should be i a bins a Pon — in light 
sandy soil a tempe =e 
and 
rofusion of finely-shaped ee ee flowers for | urine 
well deserves to 
moni a 
o 
ier | magnesia 
p, therefore, a sharp ] 
a hur the moment it closed for 
is greatly encouraged by | suffocatin 
. 
ides, which will be sure to make their 
mstances s soon l tab 
smoke case, it 
— 
I kept some urine in an 2 weirs enti the urea was 
recipi- 
y all the ammonia, 
recipitate readily 
dried on ne to the air, and, ee certainly not 
inodoro wk dad off any n found 
it to —.— of pont: pad of lime 
p and iu fixed and swept up 
the straw, which would e ae to waste into 
the drain. I have no doubt the salts are formed 
as in the case of tlie decomposed urine. An economical 
the m 
the 
— for its containing the v 
ingredients re 
by plants prs to the 
e yielding up its eleme 
nd 
, they might 
the first failure 
mes powerful in render themselves independent = the Peruvian or any 
ther 
2 
act from a Paper on 
or gmin 
— Minerat Manures N Mr. Li Ling Blyth, read before the 
iety 
Sale of Orchids: What of prives the 
