PE OO ee ae 
IRTEN 
i 
ed 
THE GARDENERS’ ä 
should 
„ n 
se best with 
be in the eyes 
holes in the pee wall of 1 3 and drains under 
se ha 
the floor. 
ied as far, an da 
its most 3 eee 
m 
running ro 
was only succeeded by the 
same, , and, whether in the front t or in the rear, 
and 
In my opinion, at the — of ‘the e class of plants now 
s y opi sidera adhe on, stands the S 
, 13 being named 
in a list ate tised in the Chronicle’ of * 22 inst. 
e aracte 
These di n height, intensity of co 
of foliage. "By placing a stron ng plant of a robust, tali 
prake the ote ofa small b it w 
s stately growth, 2 forming che bor dee 
of ren of a Avart development, a pyramidal bed is 
produced, the lustre and charming beauty of which are 
unsurpassed 
T, and Clara 
5 lants may be introduced in vacant 
spaces, either tine Bt to a stake, or, if of a 
dwarf-kind, made — the ground. 
Next in durability a — abundance of bloom come the 
shrubby yellow — eontrasting so ae y con 
the searlet Pelar Th 
plante 
= 
8 
uchsias des 
They are graceful in in 
gay till the fr ects ef auta umn set in. 
et 
s and Talips, Fuchsias 927 
ving with t 
— oe look . in 
the purpose. 
ly 
s but the he, 1 I boarded one of those &e. 
It 
small R that fl 
Thame: 
he bridges, carcely ended t 
n | ho 
was about a solid — of — 
ed to see 42 jointed chimney folded | w 
wth, profuse bloomers, and continue q 
— 
us and í durable beauty. 
may be all 
may be seen — the weekly 
the Chronicle. — H. B 
oN toners 
LOW 
lang 
— THE FIRE WI 
meee 
aes venting of h — for alth 
ea 
one subject, and eee, 
easily resolve themselves one, 
the g t of 
eg To cs erer ventil 
= so well is this 
e air of 
: 160 
eee 
a f 
8. 8 
10 
80 well as the self-acting system that we see 
at work; for every ray of heat that warms 
causes a dislodgement of the air in imme- 
with its surface. Now thi 
“pig 3 hortienlture, 
TEHE 
1 
a 
277 
10 
AY 
ing 
gardening, surely it would be a 
te ing take and few w ce cavil at any 
so an end. 
Fel 
$ 
HF 
H 
ES 
gain so 
y one who on 
I am coming 
EFSEFEE 
irr 
FEH 
115 
[H 
1 
5 
j! 
1 
i 
* 
. channel some e after 
ba 
th 
AIR OUT OF HOTHOUSES AND 
ITH 1 
the 
ating is to fe 
the 8 of the . 
— 2 have been impraetie 
n- 
C 
w 
as a nuisance in every 
to the dismay of some pa 3 flame issued forth 
a the top of the chimney of a Gravesend steamer, 
t of my f 
against the without a any smoke funnel on en to 
the — of tl Tham 
s left unburnt 4 tet 
are 
nsation for 
5 
on the 2 for a bellows 
not — to mention the fact thata small 
vidoes ce does i 
that. it is quite — 
y in a hothouse furn: 
through the flue, without raisi ing the 1 
ouse 5° e! the n ee e, . many a t 
aste at , for 
rom coa 
upper air,” but go A ike other filth in 25 low 
the fashion of pus the 
noke dov r be it aise me 
it is not allo ow ed a 1 but is forced i into the foul a 
drain by v a valuable a application v the 
same continuous blast-bellows 3 no Hai - 
l 
h a waggon; ; 
d bellows for this purpose require 
. cubic yard. Could not such 
an apparatus be stowed into any ordinary stoke-hole in 
a 5 ? and if it were let us see what it 
sed fo 
ea 
The ordinary "u of making a fire in a hothouse | pipes, 
furnace about 
st matting, aiid the brush 
0 
, 
urnace doors, nor any other expe 
ah for his handywork 
As the red sparks lit the air.” 
is all other fire kindlers seem sorr ry wights when com- 
with him, and although it is sien Maric lly be 
could be | fed 
w 8 under the Pipes flue: 
arran t 
r dark nights, and it did ian 
lieve ed or understood, still there is no question as to the 
the fire 1 in excess, an 
it is very clear that egr we 1 a strong draught we an 
can l. 
use inferior urnt powdered slack 
ham of inferior ee. — into . with common 
clay and used quite psi ve, ee As * —— eo 
t hite heat in a frosty nigh ut such a 
8 able if I had wante da 
ort time, and still more so if the fur- 
had only a weak draught. In short, it would 
rie a a ny this kind of fuel without a large 
— 
ow 2 obliging as — was in the da of yore, when 
forge armour for Achilles, it vee surely be 
= while for the elegant Flora to pass the compli- 
, and ask him for the loan of his bellows. 
e ground, so that the fresh air hoki enter t 
— te Waitt tie better, 
n | and if covered at night e matter, for the old gardeners 
well the truth of — ee 
ber frames with 
they covered their 
mats in the long, cold, 
no harm, but if they shut 
and the 
only require attend- 
stoves smoke at 3 we 
knew 
Cucumbe 
they found the atmosphere unhealthy, 
nt of the vent pe 
too close 
5 sick for wan 
a few minutes, say 20, 
from the e fire is kindled until the se feels 
quite hot; and T despatch of business i in uch an 
x , is of no small importance. And again om 
frost: mornings, a fire can be 
m the peran ture of — on itis tim 
ofa a day s and a s command of fire and ventilation 
I 1 do ge epee 5 give any a for ce ap out 
this 1 5 beg leave to call a to the 
age Aia what "gardeners —— and 
hat I see tbat could f great service to us 
service to 
w 5 
—— by any be come at; and 
