THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
83 
102 FLOWER S$ SEEDS. e eee eee | ed 3 top Wok the manner ee 
arriage e n at manner explained 
german, fresh i ne | Nemophila i 3 9d. Per oz. eee to the er e minimis non curat in his Treatise to be “a light top-dressing of | cc 
Mie oat oie a aia Finns ex; and th ty may seem to ran ong the | bones, loamy soil, rotten manure, and decayed car- 
Trom show flowers Peas, sweet, mixed, 3d. per oz, | minima. Bu ot so; it is quite the reverse. | rion, covering the whole with an inch ortwo of half 
perce, fom 3b man double Portulacca of sorts ighteen-pence is three-quarters of a days l tten stable manure t ent 1 
Balsam French sp 9 2 d eae em 7: b A 88 out of pla s even if he is 1 — Pa good ap 8 no 905 i 8 pia Sue Tr 
” an a9 ne 3 s 
E; = 2 Phlox 8 $ rocure temporary employment: and it is no to know what this pod derei to do with the p 
geome iberi ifo 8 trifling matter to be obliged to work hard for nine pat atissue. Th a little horse-flesh, in 
Sade c fom stage flowers | Primula sinensis fimbriata hours and a half in order to earn the right of saying | state of decay, is — ot the same thing as filling 
e, bri ght b Salvia patens ame —“ I, Tuomas Barnes, am thirty years old, have an a border with lu aps of putrid flesh. “adding one 
pulchella Salpiglos xed excellent character, can give the best references, | good-si orse or Cow carcase to ey 
— tuberosa. ü Sehizopetalon Walkeri and desire to find emplo ment as a gardener.” For| yards” ( Treatise, page 9); and we certainly should 
ontolvolus, 9 3 erman, 36 beautiful perm ission to utter in public these two Potion piera not be inclined to apply to the iB n 
Duss pul Bee new Separate or eee is necessary to pay eighteen- -pen thr r. Rogenrrs’s term cautio own that to us 
„ fa rthings per word. In addition to eh 1 the en, seems rather the rev 
Hearsesé, fr nest oy super’ pe a abe Intermediate eighteen- -pence is paid for the oat paper, d But we half suspect that after all the controversy 
varieti ed o arate sete ee large-leaved 
ark * dy Trachymene cærulea 
kae dwarf German, very l canariense 
; ixed tricolorum 
. Verbena, choice sorts 
Let it ae be remembered that many gardeners 
— hagrens Viscaria oculata are obliged to advertise week after week, over and 
ier pines — Zinnia elegans coccinea black | over again, before t they can attract attention, and 
a oc ta: per splendid mixed the sums levied u upon them by the stat e be seen 
mme above choice kinds of FLOWER SEEDS may be had at | to be an intolerable burthen. Nor i tax less 
i: packet, 12 packets for 5s., or 30 for 10s. 6d., from Joun worth condemn n, if we ropor- 
— and Sons este Nursery, Reading, Berks. Also, i P 
4s of 500 other kinds may be had at 3d. per packet, or the rove a it bears to the other costs attending 
hardy kinds for 6s. their Priced LIST oF Cent. per cent. is the Government ch for short 
i S, and Sons also cali SEDA = oa ee aiilish deen ene a rate which, although | familiar to 
s 
ed. financie 
D AND GENUINE SEEDS — 
F FINE GROWING QUA 
Wee E. RENDLE AND CO, gane are 
a 
>? 
ELGIAN CARROT . per Ib. 
3 RED ALTRINGHAM DO. è. 83 
- 
8 
n= 
& YELLOW GLOBE ” 
All other Seeds equally moderate. 
1 are recommended, as prices may probably 
eas 
penny postage si 
w oe EN GARDEN SEE 
shi: excellent assortment of all the ‘best 
of KITCHEN. GARDEN SEEDS, all of which have 
ee fom selected stocks with seru upulous care — at- 
i and w hich w wec n supply 2 the following terms: 
1. —Comp ate collection of 16 quarts 
supply £210 0 
— in smaller < quantities oe 110 0 
0 0 
0 12 
l 1 pe SORTS AND QUANTITIES FURNISHED 
‘ wn A No, 1, COLLECTION CAN BE OBTAINED. 
Upwards of a thousand purchasers are annua 
-applied frm this Establishment, Every kind of — 
aple, Falmouth, or to 
our difference in opinion from our very clever cor- 
s | respondent turns, oa many other differences, upon 
the meaning of a wor 
carrion ? tand i 
the early stage of decomposition, were! putrid 
effluvia not less dangerous to nts than 
it is offensive and disgusting. These early 5 
of animal decay, be they what they may, are 
iven off in such abundance for a certain time, 
nse in whic e 
taxes divans levi od upon the industrious classes. 
to mak 
w 
wealth, our 1 our 
all sorts, as much as the e 
brow, and can onl 
sw 
by F or starving himself, his wife and children. 
rdener who earns 128. a wee 
8 
— 
unt of advertisement duty paid 
o Government ees the United Kingdom was not 
ree 130,000. in the year 1842-3, when the re- 
e 
| ed before sen 
SB. Orders above — sat be op site (package and carriage 
8 Bristol, Exeter, Bar 
9 e Great Wester 
al logue 
„E. RENDLE & Go.. Plymouth, 
ABLISHED 1786, 
tto, 403. 
s, collections of named German Asters, Stocks, 
» Zinnias, &c., from 2s. 6d. to 5s. per 
can be forwarded safely by post 
55 Kidney,” 2s. 6d. pe ck. 
price 6d., or sent post 
ee Hinia for 1 1847 ana 1848, on receipt of Sine | 
— Chronicle. 
URDAY, UARY 5, 1848. 
e varieties, in 4 40s. to 608. 
to 608. 
— ee 
Wap 
ata nied bela a aron i 8 press has at 
no possible way is 
of advertisement, | 
unknown corre- 
sh 
i 
8. 2 
= oO 
TER 
P 
nts place should not be placed — 
—| the classes 800 exempted from the payment of 
this 
w 
uld not treat Mr. Rozerrs’s letter on 
We 
Salas aes some of the 
er introduced into 
OBERTS first 9 whether his carrion- 
d N been excelled by others treated to a 
less offensive iet. 
e have 
arere 2 Ibs. 5 ok ca or a bunch of Muscats of 
2 Ibs. 9 ounces to o the e ki ing 
2 = 3ounces—and such are the differences . 
those of Eshton-hall—we must retain our opinion 
that en are not improved by being fed on car- 
It is said that Mr. Hurcuirson’s Vines were 
1 
er t 
t ey have become 
o or eight years old, only bear bunches ave- 
g llb. So that the carrion-fed Vines are not 
1 by age, and their present state is to our 
minds anything rather than “ co ive as to the 
erm ger to be derived arap pees —— Ss 
Ropsrts states t rapes | 
seen “by him i in Cheshire, pany senindi a con- 
property, our servants, horses, carriages, luxuries of | i 
t| At all events, admitting rade it m 
ed to 
at his Grapes were excellent | 
evap ce de ord, is wholly 
purpos z 
tions Groni put trid fie 
by the surrounding so 
unfit for gardening 
degrees the horrible em 
and then their d prince quality disappears. In 
fact, decayed pe that is to say, carrion which 
has ] s offensiveness, is not carr at all; it 
or any o 
Quite the contrary: and we yeadily admit 3 after 
a time the dead horses in the Vine 1 ssh- 
ton, ceasing to be dangerous, will become apatiit 
and harmless manure. But the mischiefis done before 
tliat time ; the first stage in oe growth of the Vines 
as been e iiaa and w whether any 
amount of after care will quite repair the da 
are still fore 
use of so dene . ial as carrion 3 
good, and therefore ought to be abandoned. 
Ix connexion with v. question of the APPROACH 
to a pange is that of the Lopee at the entrance 
of a Park, or of — nsive Pleasure grounds. At 
first sight no question would a 
b ell exposes this evil: “In 
ome places the entrance is a triumphal arch, like a 
large hole in t all another it is a wood 
bring before our readers. Now, either of two prin- 
les may be kept in view—or 
he 
3 is kot offensive to the 
eye of Taste, even at the entrance of an extensive 
is the sty le of n e in the mansion. 
Now it is manifest that the adoption * this prin- 
ciple involves . important elements, and, 
cautiously panded, 
ice! 
proportions in the lodge at the entrance 
Park. But in more limited pleasure grounds it is, 
perhaps, 7805 ts graceful plan that can be devised. 
The othe hich ma sept in view 
omits. We speak, of course, of the h higher at 
