48—1852:] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
255 
aun TREES, ROSES 
xp. SON have mg! offer 
stock of particularly ya setae 
sphere, 
pan in such a 
s) the — of the 
vegetation beeomes remarkably active. accidents ses th a to Sa to the same 
dose as four —— (déci- | cate 
r 
These statements cannot: but give rise to serious 
Stan dard a vou lange» ideration f ammonia in the air of 
Peara and Plume, with clean “trait ms tible at the end of t consideration i 
and fine bash re Pm asec > sesia Warme Per min time forward the intensity of its a hothouses is ewn in this country, 
ou — Se . 10% | Leayes which v he beginning pale, become and the effeet of its 5 as described by 
` Standard È 1 * an e green, and tually turn alm t My Virre, ig what mig ght pa 22 — 
— Plame.) fears 18 their stalks become long pigi stif, and Meir expected from the spill laws of vegetable life. 
— e S mendate, 7 pve! dad agë ining. At last, when ‘vegetation | | Nev ertheless the e of these facts in a 
» — > SE roth dad rer dozen. is over, the crop is found to be aah more consider- | and is à poi r to Pora ga pna 
Eure tall — < i it is also are quite unaccustomed, and to which we invite 
w se rarities f Climbing and able than in plauts growing in pure air; it is 9 ? 
— from Batson 6 best. v p ni oo | thi — eae found. that ho et for: ee contain — pet geri We shall ourselves: hance to ihe 
4 — Ph nus it appears tha we cannot but 
Fine De aris, wat Brae Standard =- sort, ; 1 say Topa exercises a- doub influence upon plants; hope that 80 very interesting a memoir as th at which 
Lian — end a d ger 100 I, it favours their growth; 2, it renders their is now noticed will. be speedily — to the world 
E i sito names a a — * produce more nitrogenous. : in its integrity The report of which we ha 
e ds,Nacsery, — near Uolfield, Sassen. : 1850 the produc PREN pure air | attempted to give our readers the ee vane 
: i f M. VI. 
= PINUS AUSTRIACA,” r., wa much to Genito e ards the details 
l 
THE BLACK AUSTRIAN PINE, 
Lycounr, “AND 
large stock of pte! S od aney: strong pean this nin 
-desirable PINE, 0 2 f. igh, which, having 
2 sin de rooted, and conse-.| 
tly quite safe to remove to any distane 
Superior q 27 aality cen E attention having b 
price, rom 203 af —4 — 50 per 
have also of — to 6 feet: — ‘equally 
— owing to 7 A pena a sa — * aving been paid to 
their roots, a a nately gher prices. 
This noble erviceable Pine thri ‘ives in bleak 
vation) ; 22 
0 
shelter I 
not grow. It also succeeds ad mirably close 
am "ye resisting zahi prs dxa iy y *. — Leut — winds, 
and Co, beg le eral stock 
— — Troen F Fra poner — kate S; &., 
is endeedingly fine; Priced Lists of which — s be forwarded. 
on 7 — 
pon Meor — n November 27. 
ge ni 
to 138.20 gr., containing 1.501 of nitrogen. In 1852 
a" — of Wheat N in ape air 11.86 gr. 
and 47 ns of corn, which weighed 
he ste aal air the same number of 
bee produced 21.99 Br. of vag and 75 grains of 
corn weighing 1.89. ure air con 
101 ed 0.043 nitrogen, in Annes air 0.165. All 
ese had been dried before weighing at 120° CRN 
ab in ain 
experiments, and of the manner in which they were 
| conducted 
Wæ have authority for stating that the East India 
ue ompany have dete den to reine keng inport 
attempts, at introducing Tea malayas, 
won with Chinese skilfal in che ait of, preparing 
hp leaves, and that. Mr. Forruns is again charged. 
ith the operations. It is understood that ‘he will’ 
weil in about a month. 
Kr CYCLAMEN, ar 
Few g plants are more useful age 
the Faak, vat slg ‘charining genus. Strong e 
eans 
NEW EARLY . PEA». 
“DWARF PROLIFIC.” 
eee 
early P A, which is weem} 
hompson’s ot pla Producing’ a i — 
— — the former, and weg Fah e pro- 
meng Poe — | above. DA aen 
hardy; rare 4 2 pers n height, 
and e PAi — ne sticks; it 2 * re abana jron, 
the ground to the summit, and p roduc: 
1 2 in — yke»: 
Brown, Gardener Bart. of Py ao —— and 
Mr. Scott, gardener to Wynn Ellie, Ee oa. us bour 
to say that — have grown it for two Wes and consider ie ita 
-r all known varieties 
season. 
cu ort 
ty and most ce maach at 
es ee by post on applica 
AMERICAN PLAN TS 
to, announce his. Catalogue 
S, Conifers, &c., is now published, 
2 by 5 two worthy of s stamps. The 
— . 
Joux WwW 
of the above Plants, Rose 
and may be ob 
colours bw he all th 
—ͤ— - exhibited 
irdens, Regents Pan are — — 
heat. one 1 — Surrey, 
some W Y, 
se setas ienaat, — 
ara MANETTI 
‘ue fom Pa 
and3 
8 
STOCKS, 
ESTABLISHED IN POTS FOR FORCING, 
. 7 
several months 
If plants are Pepe to the influence of ammon 
e flowering, there is nothing 
particularly depend in their vegetation 
more vigorous than in pare air, but. the ordinary 
succession» ofi — not distur 
mo the 
be pagan are eee if we wait till a plant is 
ut to come into 570 er before ammonia is added, 
enomena bec of quite 0 kind. 
Under such conditions ‘lowering is arrested, and 
vegetation takes a ne One might say that 
the plant = Shak to i former ground; the. 
stem 
e fo 
g DRT, sev plad 
t 
rmed blossoms, whieh, Jif 
Boers, froi amp, a vs 
wee eks together in ise Bir 
pact in ae of easy car 
tarting into growth), as frequently. 
8 yen Se that have been kept quite os gai 
uring the 
Good SATIN | Pants 3 now will probably 3 
Commenced: Saray 70 27 
a 
lahat than the parent stem. 
eeds 5 
It is etal to say that all — — experi- 
on u — lass e regards 
lengthen „ directions, pot room; sa; ihi a er wer only should 
becomes Sencha with ere leaves, and then, ur Siven * 23 1 
if the season is not too far advanced, the suspended planes eee a ora oe 
| flowers wering: — — e e i te 
If this experiment is tried upon a cereal plant in whi 1 the y are grown is of ile i eq 
whose hollow stem: is — of branching, then | wh without loss. 
precise nature of apts omenon is modified. and as the blossoms appear before the Sole 
Th bi Tata hs of the stem is stopped, and the | developed. „there will be little difficulty Decanting Galan 
put e tillers, Ane t sti which | at ik; ee 
c 
h 00 plant 
t Y eee the where they will be t 
e fine stock of the shove, one year ery, Tork has 8 value of ammonia in hotho 2 now ascer- | mence x“ Mes er from the frost, 
int i i — 2 yg. om 1 Perpamal;, Bourbon, taikai beyond -all do ber hen the air is dosed | sitting-room window, w gere, care: to. : 
only be charged —4. — pegs Rea ta, and will wit 0.0 per cubic yard it was found that from currents of cold air, her vill b. be quite at | 
It has sets paces proved Y m Barde a noblemen’s pnd most striking effects were produced upon Orchid- | and will be beautiful objec me two. uths 3 
e r 8 force | aceous plants is to be observed, however, that best situation, however, ; À 
large. he growth ig more robaat, and the flowers more n the i of ammonia during the heat of summer ma: . e is near the 8 TA oes Abe : 
produce serious. e advises the dis- ay average from 4 A 
e e e — niana of 13 through. the months of June, July, ee air ean b be admitted w its passing 
wieh to give the Manetti an ust. ecidents allude rer. on in plants, as windows. 
— 2 “ipon aeir te this 15 * we 222 “yr leaves — 8 — ma arit N negloet dire e of the flow at Cye = 
— the stoek of soma fore wi 1l soon be exha 4 ph tg tae the at ee n —. Piva uty. ers is over, 
s — aa and the plant dies. water until the following autumn, when they are wanted 
Tne Gardeners’ Chronicle. his is s supposed to — balaas b between at SYR This is the ing s rey verse Of what tha ey require, 
i SATURDAY, — 27, 1852. 
ENSUING WEEE. 
„ er. (Anniversary) isss.. 8 rn. 
Nor. on Briti — — serta sero ao 
Tonsbar, noiversary 4 r. u. 
. — yea 8 r. x. 
Tea, {Society of Arts . 5 00008 Polis 
S 
r ural . „ P.M, 
Zoological 3 r.m. 
r S . ux. 
ee eee 2 r. K. 
ks 8 r. x. 
——— —— 
its uses to plants are matters of such 
that we lose 
one and 
ga striking 
2 —5— are intended to furnish Ponts 
121 * 
with eral ters. bstances 
9 pami certain limit the plant is unable 
to use what it receives, and saline effloresences fo 
on the — — the leaves. This is frequenly | 
ob — plants lita the w 
becomes dey after _ heavy rains, Bu t — owing 
the lea 
are more active . — the roots, oe elements are 
gs 5 chiefly abs se elements 
be 
Raste! is abso. mes, to pass 
phenomenon; 8 the N unable 
the substance of a memoir upon to suppl 
poe alee OF y the plant furnishes from its 33 
. e Jate number and the sub of a certain number of leaves. 
M. Vitter, the author of | RESOnnkD resorption of old organs, 2 the. 
hein pr his esearch S been already favourably | use of y u on in n if! 
2 researc — into — —— — — of nitro- we pull up a Purslane plant, when in flower; and put 
account will be it in the shade on a sheet of paper, vegetation goes o 
— ge —.—— volumes. 1 and the seed forms and ripens, But in this ease the 
of ammonia. > ‘investigation of the action mineral 98 goin ase 
ived from the soil, 
6. 
. en enen ammonia to the atmo- | 
deriv 
‘given up by the Paeis al the plant “cel "The 
| sown. in well-drained pots, 
and s mer 
annually occasions the 
my 3 oes allowed a light, airy s ' 
greenhouse or pit, and kept. properly supplied w 
wale anti PRE when 1 may be removed to a sha 
situation out of doors; when the leaves 
very li i 
exci 
of many bulbs, The ; J a 
situation in the 
ut cannot |i 
milated unless a suficient quantity of of mineral house in 
rbed. Thereupon there 
hades f the knife, Seeds, soon grow into 
track of t 
useful plants. “They should be calleeted when ripe, oat 
leaf-soil, 
autumn. Th hey germi 
te Se 2 in a tem 
care to soil mapalad 
looked sher r during winter, Sat will be 
