THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
37` 
all moderately firm and 
N ne ae 
the inuene “of — iol Moss a few days 
media uperintendence the young 
sruggling wa Tight and liberty, ‘will have be- 
tangled in their fostering canopy, which on 
bang removed Sorting ith it the greater r portion of the 
plants, pasg the re emainder Ma d deformed. 
A which will succeed well einas w your 
i 0 sc ribed, 1 the pots in 
ted ains, but 
u 
1 
come e 
& 
S 
24. 
zE 
= 
S 
© 
n=) 
inea, gracil is, &e., will 
sequently pote cuttings reap in the year, a 
succession. p 
Í 
f 
i 
i 
; 
; 
se 
* S grow 
rae roots to be formed, 
oody; if the 
qui —4 . — it: í ir the latter, no 
ble) will be emitted : but the 
ure thro gish i the 
i K otg; and losing little by 
being protected ze the e will remain green and 
a collection of 
LP tee = b follows that the | 
rs operations mu le 
Struck ts, 11 
thes by potting 
ained, and a 
ter, from their 
ing, e select 2 like those 3 
va a similar mann 
the ated. 
feront species vary much— 
5 
1 and a 
y 
wth, and | and 
medium of | them 
E 
8 
88, given the whole l watering; 25 
tion, and the moi 
in a month or so after the in- 
could give them the 
os a a n bottom-heat the emission of roots will 
ace As the periods of rooting of the dif- 
from five or six weeks to as 
any months—the quick growing kinds and those of an 
rend e — should have re separate pots.— 
mas day; 
ed still ‘eke’ — 
al gardeners an nd gen 
whom have d the G. 
b 
os enge bars fev days. 
my h which r a gentle h 
a fre! 5 3 therefore lighted the first thing in the morning 
o bur 
y RY 
pa te quite sufficient to force as 
si Farran, aie Gree nt =e hum 
Early Bloom 
OE 
3 
— 
either bec 
is deficient of the literary ane e 
clearly upon paper, or sometimes, perhaps, diro the 
want of sufficient liberality to ata what are . 
4 be 88 vs the craft. But nly by means of 
ag of knowledge that ur system, en 
of — lins physiology, or _philesoph 
cati 
ees in natural history. T then dge ———ä— 
of Dr. Bucklan r. Roget naw 2 0 
of | t 
thought a 1 ar ike to see eer by — | he 
art i 
uld ass Paley’ 5 
„Natural "Theology 5 may be bought second-hand for a 
e trifle, an cupy and improve man 
inter’s evening. Let it not be su such 
3 valueless in a practical point of view: on 
the raat it inte beet the highest practical use 
Tenant Right occupies so much of public attention 
d that 
= 
A 
nt 
s | exhausted ? every ane almost sett to suppl 
Why 
mber ? 
3 P. M., a that heat | i 
aragus.— and I am inclined, 
menced 3 
n b 
: first, and r on. 
Febru 
to furnish pr 
corrections or contradictions = genera ral prin- now 
he 
y a dull | It 
trenching an active soil of from 18 inches to 2 feet in 
depth. This effects the N escape 7 rain in 
s the soil warm an 
come a convert, nfortunate nine-gallon 
k in the e up it was brought, and the good 
liquid, intended to be used as it was anted, was at 
0 discharged the street, no result, of course, 
accruing from the proceeding. My celebrated friend, 
> Smith, of Dea » by draining from 2 feet 
6 inches to 3 feet deep, has kep iew just to be 
y 
springs. 
moisture is to e dur ron at par 
from above ; it must Se continually ri 
ching ‘dalton ?—not 
a 
Do we not find after a dry summe 
from below. 
e wells nearly 
to form dews ? some of our dee 
dispel the ve ery “ae cloud 
ould. Have not the rivers of Englan 
ad Trlan, fallen several fi 
struction of ti 
on this ace 
destroy ’ those beautiful he Hever of trees 
pepe the fields e farms of e 2 $ 
ra Ponda coo er as it pas 
hot air * ugh 
e afford protection a vente and brenk the « Le cold 
n t wind in sprin 
al 
eal of the ripening o corn, 39 
south-westers ; and, lastly, they form a 
dse But, be it 
against drai 
a preventive against the 
warding off ou 
co. 
I am not for 
to pay for other 
Ray sary draining. as 
pepis e in this ae ad why, the publie in * 
who can ill afford it. 
er's shop, often thos 
James 3 ne 
Disb = ee —In the garden I lately had 
an old Apricot tree which 
7 all, giving 
tree an unsightly seine nae and in order to correct 
this and bring aioe bear as soon as it eo 
inap y this 
e threw out 
buddi 
away at once; the largest w ut 
Little more was done until the follow- 
ing uary, when the tree was 3 iled, 
and out of an ne f and eren tively barren object 
I had a handsome and prolific tree, extending upwards 
of 20 ss on En . left 2 te boll, which I Fjudgedto 
e between 60 and 7 old, 
= 
about 30 dozen were allowed to 
late Sabet Be J. R Esq., Sev 
Uses which Po . Heating may be Applied.— 
wherever diffi ur, they ee ari 
8.5 
requiring a damp or pratt 2609 and 
bably answer well for ‘the pemi s pine in 
our climate, or for f o untry in 
ress | and others (who are as much, perhaps more interested 
n . 
in the matter than fa 
eted 
ost in arousing those whom it 
t con o get themselves incorporated in — 
ae e of the bill or bills expected shortly to com 
before 
bour and 
always in a few years 
in co ce of the dense mass of putrified matter e 
8 to the growth of — roots.— G. ee am jet into the chimney of = 
Notions of a Market Gardener.—The drainage along with the smoke of the latter. 
the market garden grounds round London consists not | temperature is regulated by the , by fey 
pipes or tiles, but in alternately deep digging and | water, &e. No draught i is perceptible ; the ofa 
