* 
102 THE 
———— CHRONIC 
LE. 
being directly over the hot-air chamber, | 
the moist air from. which can be freely, admitted shee en 
required into No. 2 house, by part holes in the stone 
floor through which the tanks D, plan 4, are filled e or 
Finally, by the spin nof A a- iron 3 ſor 
be heating material, no deleterious, gas 
e 
H 
sia ome ea orrespon 
Planting 3 
0 i seeking employment, an 
ndence. 
Being always an henge for the 
of o 
removal of Hol ordinary 
with Mr. Rogers’ hat subject. I belie 
him to both theoretically and practically right 
Practically, I have seen, with him, evergreens | 
which we oved at the end of tl s ki a 
and never San ca 7 Pht 
© | for advertisements sa NES, much higher th 
er.] men t, they n made 
conscientiously t that 
8- | the 
answer to 
the e once asked in your eolumns, “ What is the 
best and cheapest flooring for a ty! R 
Advertisement Duty.—1 see, by your p 
February 5, that you. are 1 up the ery, begun, 
I believe, in Douglas Jerrold’s Newspaper, and echoed 
by ceveral country prints, about the wat, A of the mu 
Is. 6d. on 3 ents, particularly to persons 
efore in some degree o 
of 
want. I fear this — is wee altogether eee on 
has become impressed with the e normity of the ko 
ae on the nation by hedgerow tinh 
sou is loss are manifold, and a 
1 out, as they are apt to escape La i 
those no in the le subjpat, Tie ohh 
itted b the roots is and l 
eni and in 
the part of the press; for Lam old enoug! 
how matters were a the duty, on advertisements was 
3s. Gd. At. that time very short advertisements were 
inserted by tha news) 
and I can show by my books, that the 
at the former per e proprietors. 0 of a 
üs sing OE A alg p" all the remitted duty into their 
n pockets, nt, cannot be unaware of 
8 or, rials it the ‘subject be monies in Parli 
he aware of i I believe ve 
t, g7 the whole duty 8 remitted, 
3 Be | 
and arid w always p the publie would not, for any — of time, pay Id. Jess 
nie ing taken, if m nshine and a fair | for r erti nts ; I dreia evil would 
pply of moisture did not follow, to give them a little be the result to the proprietors of suc 
e 
d; an 
to the Portugal Laurel, e 
Bay, e and other ey fers 1 
stands to am aware 
of this Baari — a speech) that e and deciduous 
lants should differ in their seasons for transplantation. 
cest its 
8 
i diately : ilst the evergreen, not 
being prepared to with its foliage, has iis. vital 
fluids wasted by their evaporation, and suffers other- 
ise such a check to its yet unfinished round of imbi- 
bition and elaboratio must ry mpair its 
ving ken its resistance to frost and 
und i 
these ci stances it fails to strike till the approach 
of summer, if not already dead, and then s 
feebly as to be very 3 surpassed by its spring- 
t is a common saying amongst Cor 
fav 
gardeners — a “ Box planted at Michaelmas 
I have seen it do 
the 8 abuse | p 
ment it would afford to the setting up of poor 
aoa ductions, merely on account of t e erpa 
irom the advertisements alone : hus” dividing the at- 
— of advertiser s, and dim 
in the matter, e 
ublications to ‘si reat an evil, that I am almost 
determined to e n advertisements to we 
aah my ow 
“ Leading Journal,” and such other paper 
your own, ete an individual character, suing into — 
hands. of the v very — for whom the publication is 
peculiarly intended. — A Sexagenarian 
[ We cannot answer for others; but we d 
for ourselves to —.— ct publie the ake benefit of the 
t t du 
T 
Publis 
o undertake a v 
r 
tivator of s enclosures, and the 
the various causes e erate 
ree in regarding fields surrounded 
area, 8 acr 
Al 
desert—if th 
pan ofthat n be 
senery, I t but e 
repeal of the adv om the first at present | the eultiv 
day that the mpa shall mÀ e also although the productive energies 0 
observe that if newspaper proprietors sh take | incre y shelter, and the el 
_— tage of — . of the s duty, the ule possesses farms as of the country paa may 
most efficient of all rem judicious planting, still to effect these objects 
r e etrays an 88 . wit ith injury to the aerator it should be placed in 
newspapers 3s. is a very common charge for short | and belts, not in hedgerows as 
advertisem: sts, where the benefits derived from i 
8.] 
n ee Artt Climbers.—Some ye 
his opinion, through t an — of 
ears.ago Mr, Beaton 
2 
-weighed 
Kirk, Kingsw 
dies off a t Christmas. have so, and ap- | your pi a e ng the merits of certain conser- | rrespondent’s t’s letter a oblige 
5 tha d not | vatory climbers, and, having profited by his 3 kavis, I which was not necessary to ment 
the — to keep itself in heart till the | am induced pame se ask for fresh floral news from him s 5 bar ion.—Three. y ago 
The sooner any pl es and | or some other espondents, on the same > subject t not tw rom Wakefield, where I had 
emits new 3 after removal, the is its is true that I ae ane to follow his advice in erect- Vineries ews had produced little for years, 
eventual prosperity. Does not this rule ‘hold ood | ng a hot pit at the back of my conservatory, to allow of | Vines m were ne ears old. By p 
with all! and more especially with those are the introduetion of stove climbers in the mer ; but | sion of my employer I remade the bo rders. 
tenacious life; and are. not sok nak following his advice, I have med Stephanotis flori- | first place I took the Vines — * * 
generally less —— than _ 8 The | bunda in a tolerably manner, whi u N in a N bad si of 
: s plants o tia grandiflora is growieg vigorously, tho not co: 2 2 
of Who does not know that Asparagus yet in a, blooming ia. I rien therefore, 2 this sont Lauf fam 4 re, and stable manure, 
p the autumn, ry eafly in the spring, enquiry may lead to my obtaining e ee more this | result is that la 
seldom do well? If they do not strike and year that may rank with my old favourites, Bignonia i 
to 
2 very quickly after Planting, they pe mouldy at 
rot, and die ¢ the 
ps a Cauliflowers. “The — ttings oft the most viva- 
cious of garden shrubs, Gooseberries, Currants, 
en 
&e. &e., best w vered and Auel! in the grou 
in the spring, when they are just ready to start into 
active lifes Put October or November, the half 
of them rot and the remainder take badly, and pe 
feebly for a year or 88 o return to the * 
ve said that it m 
ha may b mes neces he 
little water to keep the eee tree e ee as it 
had struck root. It is very this 
necessary in autumn planting. But this additional 
trouble is a trifling consideration in co 
of the latter method. 
it when the pr 
ee 
— PB 
ap- 
‘grown — eiria is at 
Permit me to remind you 
= — faaea plan for making garden walks, whieh | has 
w been publish: 
—— any. Proc à quantity Of rond sand, or si i 
powdery material 0 sifted lime rubbish w 
and let it be a é — 80 
when bandied. 
got 
that it feels like be du | 
— — 
: ona 
cme -i quantity of the a a bricklayer 
reade, hia ith a hollow in 
pour some coal- 75 boili ye in 
the whale with os tg W a 
und should be 
0 it all over 
8 laid out for th 
previously beaten as level as Pe yg 
d rather coarse a few 
„ after wi 
harden, after ter which the walk 
and will last for ve is fit for use, 
must b 
a ht abl es used ad 
ut renn he use sdvantageotsy i in etry = es, 
dung pits, and farm yards, to — in eaten 
| pans do not injure 
middle, Into 
rpora 
er will press if level leave e it . 
my 
Cherere and — e Mandevilla suaveolens, and 
Pl apensis. se t is somewhat rem 
‘soturiihetanding the vas 
=] 
r$ 
2 8 
25 
as 
an a acquisition, 8 the 
teristie of on wo cu 
ray ag charac- 
and creepe 
hed — 
EF 
o tender for my purpose, but the still more 
boson Ba Diplade nia crassinoda at present seems likely to 
answer; if eee an invaluable conser- 
Seared climber.— A Dev datas 
ne ae ng Pans.—At p. 88, 
i ads ised not to use zine saddles on hot-wa y pipes. 
1 bad 20 ae five vente o ; they are now as good as 
ever, and no bad res t, and T challenge Engla nd 
to — ps ef Cucumbers 
I do.—Ja mes Cuthill, Camberwell. 
re the water; but they are objection- 
able because they e easily 1 shape.] 
my mind there is no 
beautiful object than ; ag neefal tree, and I never 2 a 
— wooded! pat N a rapturous admiration 
its 
Chest ri Sea Sasi Pin objects 
„ 4 spreading Pines, are of beauty Ca 
2 a all dhie interest we | Pe 
and apart from 
with in terms 
enchanting than the page of the — Y the tale 
family ancientness ; but here in the park of the proprie- 
= for timber exclusi 
proper 5m 
ling with the cultivated pa 7 KEN 
aries excessive neno of zerow 
a 
iar. the e 
Pm eaan ce of ae re s, have been peter Bes oa the 
in his usual | d 
Mr. Mechi 
* pise ma g ape are so e us, and 
oduetive of so much public loss, that I pes o sub- 
of | ject will not be allowed to to drop until the public 
sN 
e thing, Echites e 1 find, after a fair |i 
in 
oe gr 
and Melons than | 
[Zine evaporating the 
in the hedgerow, a t 
nee 1 have ren with w | 
argument; ane indeed the the 
el 
20 years, in the neigh 
who have used ca 
Hall, Wakefield, Yorkshire. 
London.— A dish 0 
y 
sound and e and were equal in 
and infinitely s pen in quality, to a dish ¢ of. 5 
Allotments.— In ax 
framing e — — es, 
opinion that the distribution of prizes for the ny N 
and most serviceable vegeta 3 
more benefit to the labourer. I — — abeut 
tenants, occupying lan d varying in size M 
oles, I have given rach Lage 7s. 6d., 5 
the Ist dee and s est specimens 0 
ese 
rayak Isu iy to your ete ae 
neatest and best cultiv 
pot on 1 — . — ſor the iae year (living in 
mind | greatly to 
