THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
ced in a dhi 
756 
plants towards April, and may be potted — — — 
inch pots, taking care not to injure the 
ting the i pla 
situation until established in — 
set in a light art of the gree 
weather becomes warm and ee hoy 
in A0 beds of oer Sate soil o 
1 5 
a warm 
summer require no "further 
te 
tat be ihn see 
alwa 
bo and 
Aden tih 
ring in case of the soil getting dry, 
nal wate: 
which, h. however, will seldom occur. In S 
eptember, tko 
d 
‘them up with as little injury as possible to the roots, an 
T a oam, to one u 
peat or decayed leaves, with a liberal mixture ot sharp 
sand, form a suitable compost for the Cyclamen. Alpha. 
| ON THE geese OF, PREDICTING 
E 
— from page 740. 
(a 
“Suprosine the atmosphere immova ae aud perfectly 
serene; supposing also the soil to be every 
where en- 
dowed with the same powers of — sorbing, giving out, 
and e the heat, we should t n observe, in 5 
ce of the solar action, in 2958 Lorch of the yea 
A vue apt series of increasing tempera 55 
ratur 
similar series of decreasing temper 
ined parallel the days af maximum and minimum 
Ae 
heat would P BE 47 05 the 
and hypothetic order i is mia 1 the 
motion of the ‘atmosphere ; by el 
ouds, m 
tended, more or less persistent’; by ‘the different pro- 
i 
The 
rature, ing to the 
of — van most perfect e gen out to Fre. 
of these combin urbin 
ng causes will 
— Aiii by the comparison ‘of mean periods in 
um 
which the maximum an 
temperatures are 
manifested in different 7 T The following are some 
—.— from the erater in the island of St. —.— made 
oon-day like night in the island of Barbadoe 
501 oid of dust — appear in en where 
Canad 
the 16th of October, pared Sag a sf prp 80 W 
the sky that no sso 3 Thes 
elouds extended over a 2 E 280 mes T in n Teeth 
d 200 in breath they’ appeared to come fro 
question enveloped, on the open sea, the ships W-ren 
were proceeding to the river St. Lawrence. The 
3 o'clock in the aftern 
ith regard to the: object of our a eo gee it is of 
* ae whether we attribute these eloudings, 
115 
B 
Bd 
e] 
5 
a 
8 
z] 
— 
© 
. 
P 
o 
r 
— 
35 
S 
— 
B 
E 
' 
The 
mee of temperature, meteors of all sides, of sient 
hese 40 elouds may be t ee never figure b 
hand in the annals of m logy,’ The accidental 
tensive (from Lapland to Afriea), that some a ited 
it to em matter of the tail of a comet, w they said | three years of promise, all 
es. Each | had mixed with our atmosphere. It Se possibly be | comi ss of canker, as fh 
reach maintained that an acti state of the atmosphere 
tain de 
which permitted the sun, for nearly two months, e be 
hou 
fluence on terres temperature. 
Forests cannot fail to exercise a . — aen on 
the temperatur of 5 nding The snow, for 
nstance, remains longer in them thari i in the open cou 
t e destruction of forests ought, — — re, to 
produce a modification of climate. in any 
S | given case, may this influence of forests affect the ther- 
mometer! The question is very complicated ; it has 
sec 
| Makrii | Miwimom 
e afternoon, when they 
their maximum force ; but they still exist till 6 or 7 
5 
ey 
metimes that = a violent wi he 
5t Gothard, } August 11 | December24 | { ot = solstice, s eiid therefore, to exercise a considerable ratios on 
Rome s } l ti and the climates of ad joining — we 
o 4 j eee hd solutes. hat is the ca of thes e breezes It noua 
‘} s ; a g Geren whe alsdes, | consists in the 8 by whi ch the mountain m 
gh) i 71 18 days are heated by the solar rays, and their radiation into 
E the aotastes, the valleys. Su thes d, and 
i fe B tO e & certain effect; substitute E forests 
the barren rocks, and th enon will assu 
eens differences ca oh woeatties; — when another character, as re t, its intensity 
own local eireumstane e e, 
receive from the hand of man may consid rably 
alter, in the course of a few Seats, the 
md 8 eity in Euro 
now to show, that local circumstances’ that 
arke 
are — obseure or but little rem 
eonstant and sensible influences en th i 
ae rl 
SSe 
ai 
85 
— 
= 
— we —— probably see that local cire 
play 
re important part than elentlie vent seem | 
—— oraha 2 
! -P Olonwe; for example, and 
country kor 15 miles round, 
me — 
t 
aces which 
rigorous a 
en struck 
— adjoining 
„du the 
one 
— S 3 
at Sables the weather was mild: this ms a — 
Spared by the frost. Roi tag 
There N another fict ae than 
the preceding; for it occurs every “year? There is in 
ye is 
Siberia, M. Erman ones us, & whole district, "of which 
the sky during winter is gn gr serene; ‘aiid ere | 
there falls not a — particle of snow. 
Tam inclined to pass ore — question of pekti» 
I të 
tions of terrestrial temperature, which may be connected 
with cor less abundant emission of sotar light 
and heat, whether the variations of emi depend on 
the nur f dark or of light spots, with which the 
2 
y abstand which Sees its. 
These sometimes imes proceed 
eee 
trausparency. 
‘theéraptions 
Substances 
of voleanges. ‘For instado; — immense ehe, of 
ashes whieh; 
aly l SS To *. je 21855 Hon 5 10 tte ai 
720 78 fas adt gi allt e idadorq ai a ii 
h iraq gaida? ! 
begin to arrange their ations, they ought to put 
themselves á in 8 vides ‘all the wood-eutt ters 
th 
n every country. 
In North Ameriea the interior of — N has, 
f ; hse the sa a different climate from that of 
aa Near the lakes the difference is less. 
may, t abe expect that the drying of a lake will 
arge modify! tho n of the surrounding country, and that | may 
a great inundation,’ in consequence’ of the unforeseen 
en bee: ting of 4 k 
discussed vith — urs 1 of dykes; or banks, wi ill produce, 575 a time, a 
vate any one complain — 1 enumerate causes, which, 
taken individually, do not seem to produee rig effect, 
J reply, we have to co akiai a combine 
According to Howard tlie mean temperature fo òf London 
exceeds’ that of the surrounding country by nearly 
2 — The difference, however, is not eve 
year ti rages in Flore dás Sevres et dss 
—̃ —ñ— j Stot 10 le ; 
(To be dontinued. ) 
TRADE MEMORAN DA. 
is Mr. N. pO Aali of 67, To mete, West: 
ee It is the place from which t „ Mr, 
Sad s letters were dated. e the two “genome 
— ee 
ove ins Tse Sofa il 
simple mode of culture has worked a cure here for these 
last three years, and will, I trust, do so with th — 
of your readers. I ee hitherto only noticed hows ae 
dwarfs and dwarf standards, ., stems from 2 feet in 
height. Take 
— ember, 
or indeed at any time while the ‘weather i is mild, in that 
or the following month. Shorten the long 7 j 
open a pale 2 18 inches in 8 and 1 foot deep, 
give to tree a vi ae of rich com- 
A ey nesta dung a dam; if the soil be 
eee e. — a eber pit rod f Fond 3 if ey 
amig ‘ 1 yii wF ar y — 
* z d ota i anslodo: M vidasi 15 e edt lo angmticee a soot 
be heavy and 1 Plant i 
4 
o voleano exists. a, more especially, is subject | remove 
i to 
n 2 en 
On the 2d of July, 1814, n clouds to those in be 
ness continued paw 5 o'elock in the JADORE ah 
ev 
entirely obstruct the solar ra ig the |o 
„I recommended the r emoval and 1965 
— y SRy 
obseuration of the sky, in 1783, included a s sò ex- Apples on paradise s 
Roses 
looked at with the naked eye at noon, was without in- 
ial tu b 
ig n manure. Thos. 
es 4 e “Stee x à have usually — 1 
i They | of 
not make out. My object in mentionin the 
, > ii 
r work is done. ‘Ou 
are ex "Tt now many 
of the early adios of the “ Rose 
standa 
planted in unfavourable soils. 
removal of dwarf standard Roses is therefore 
old idea, with a little fresh polish. In z 
pms ge are wished for, cover the st 
inches deep with W tanners“ 
Riv 
Smut. About fiv 4 i 
plantain thre Larch trees 1 n place 
ae patches of some vegetable parasi 
which I 3 a specimen. 
eA ag tee on their persons, I w: 
ree particular trees, T fou 
smut. D. A. e [The ¢ E jerge patehes 
i ued’ 
patches, the aphides, —— t pre he 
to the Sander rresponde ; 
unable to explain 167 eh t the 
attracted by the patehes, “sad de 
aphides ] 
Potato Di: 
nwy — their tuber stems much 1 i 
. e., — 5 their ee farther from the ae 
— i 
others bitk sales 
that i is pelenai these auk 
that suff r least from disesse. T would a 
bog have suffer AARAA ed tle 3 jä: 
and latterly that * gah been a 72 i 
This year, contrary to wh has hit —— 
ro 
Ae that tlie antiseptie 
and absorb the 3 Teed ‘by. 
progress through these long tu ure 
account for the tubers of the Pager ‘a 
Potatoes bein ‘Shee from disease’ ln b. 1g, NO 
that the leaves ae —— be affec i 
— — by applying antiseptic, 
"and er vi ger or 
— ressings to stimulate the 
J. M. * Gran arao” 
Gypneri niei m 
river, whieh Wee . 
atid 4. Ties ond 489 
