8 ] 
THE GARDENERS? CHRONICLE. 
A, Re egent-street, 
not to be afraid o 
Ho CULTURAL SOGI 735 OF Li LONDON a proofs of the truth .of the assertion. On the} of it; at so they are left at peace. The con- 
The Firs First Meeting will take Place o e the 20th of contrarx, if W there is at these shows a sequence is that slugs, caterpillars, woodlice 
. st he at this Oce on — | shabby Jot of plants, ill grown, ill prepared for ex- | grubs, maggots, ball pes of all sorts, swarm 
ae hora nie" ge re half pas Eight o clock, 4 at, | hibition, with ragged dingy lea it is ten to one with him. In every corner they protection ; 
"The Gates wil be shen to yistiits af One Tickets are but the owner is found oa man who wouldseem!and in fitting time they sally forth to pun nish 
—— at this Office sien 22 at the — ae to have slept in a hay loft for ibe last t days the gardener for his nneatness, What the effect 
th orders from Fellows of the Soc e Sir Jacon t it were necessary to of old snags is in the se we showed some 
ei bi Tickets will be issued in Re egentssrect on the days | horny hands that ‘ec should dirty ; as if weeks since by an extract from the pages of the 
thin 
i 15 ITIONS OF PLANTS, FLC 
r ọn the days of exhibition 78. . each. 
OYAL 282 — be PARK. great mass of 
Reus poiner 5 Weener he 15 
N this Season will take e place 
Gates open at 2 o’cloc 
ROYAL 5 19 eren 
Most cious Majesty the QUEEN 
wipe SECOND EXI EXHIBI TION this season Will be held at the 
ROY AL SURREY. SROLORTCET, GARDENS 
per 
BRNE with industry. 
de 
enere are very deficient in the 
Their characteristic is 
nal neatnes oie whisk is by no 15 
“ As dirty as a ardener 
ese stan, in fact to be placed among G English 
prover 
nd why is it that neatness is so peculiarly the 
rs ? he 
the 17th AR all Exhibi 
be awarded r the ol 
bree 
9 de ake 
the Society may obtained 
AXLOR NEVILLE, Secretary 
— Jonn 
15 Wee Fe, will also take place, at the Royal 
Surrey Z cal Gardens—on Tuesday, the 20th 
y — July — Wednesday, the 13th Sept., 1848. 
CTION OF O 
BE SOL LD} i Priyate Contract, o one of the most 5 
T * collections o 
assembl 
2 0 their n ative t 
ehe aeons Chronicle, = 
SATURDAY, MAY 6, 1848. 
© ° MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS. 
r 
Wzoxzsvar May 10 Society, aa a iy 
Wapxxspar — 17 yal 8 . Trem 
BATUR — rti 1 
“Wourp you make ‘a gardener a dandy ? Wh 
June ; | ¢ 
l 
we cann 
| beard i is a soe old and he has 
e| A washes s the 
d gardeners T 
= 
aS er 
not say as m 
he chi 
as “ Flor ist.” 
a ness are sure t 
0 
h 
just been cleaning di 
was 
Mr. Bec 
Nase then, let us re is 
not of less moment than skill; 
thood ; 
and the dirty ways ** lead to personal uncle an- 
find their counterpart in every part 
r 
n 1896 “gh fate of other joint stoc 
, § is filled with plants. The gardener 
floo 
into one 
hole, some bast is stuffed into another, ead Dare 
hang here, a bit of stie 
lies there; look at his 
reenhouse when nobody is is expected, and it is all 
suited to 
is now forgotten. 
222 
8 
a 
i=] 
t popi ulation is more likely to 
be pam Rieke! agaat ly by pirne, star ma enter- 
prize than 9 nden publie se 
ave n * become 
* oe hae 
sedu- 
at | litter and confusion. means uying by PARKER, She as long been a 
matter dirty hands, 1 55 face unconscious of soap, fine plants, his g. is old-fashioned and b badly |lously to the management of the ‘ti worth in 
provided a man gro plants vey and supplies constructed; an ancient flue is his resource in nd. We formerly arep: 709, 1846) re 
‘the cook with plent ‘ot kitchen st y ow ter; he is even oo pelted ty Win to the sabstance of a communicatior by ber to 
part I prefer a rough, horny N fallow not afraid | grow Grapes . as a master who dis- British Association, from which it appeared that 
or mudd, and caring nothing for neatness, to one of | reg p use is new, heated with a| might not only be ned in ‘England, which has 
your fair weather who are piponi costly apparatus, glazed with plate-glass, and filled | long been well known, but made a profitable branch 
eer d everybody wi t | with N ph an r Vines in his greenhouse of rural econo uiTBy on that occa- 
rubbish and dirt, and that sort of 8 and ss ing is never thought of. hen Ass sion produced accounts to show that a profit of as 
ink it necessary to keep themselves as spruce as Title collection is 3 e is always in order, and | much as 20. sterling might be obtai from 
alinen-draper’s shopman.” Thus e Sir Jacos in he ak, ; eyen 2 A Era the e e acre of land. Her en e y and very 
Mauzvkr, a worthy old-fashioned 83 living aa of perfee is the admiration of | skilfully detailed in the work we ha 2 
‘somewhere in in the north-east of E which may be ; 
ngland, py the 
o find him a 
cannot escape hands: 
should he? He likes si a man that is n 
or mud. Quite right again: the om ach “of a 
render it necessary that he should be in- 
nt to trifles. He is 
such 
aà fair weather gentlemen,” over dressed, over 
e and over particular. Here we cannot so sgn 
Judge of t aS correctness of his opinion, because 
2 ignorant of the value attached by him to the | 
erm “over.” We ‘fear rg age from the tone of 
Jacobs remarks, that h e prefers coarseness 
» roughness to —— and a sloven to 
— — short — 
we aronet's e 
. at — with — tre with all who — i 
inion 
he most ‘certain 8 all outward signs 
It arcel of his 
i] 
8. 8. 
2 
S 
sA 
Q 
the fees conta in another w 
the so en and the pride and — of its 
W owner. In the plants under the management of d 
plants d » grey clusters —.— here, 3 ! 3 
a the whole th atis- | 
patches there in short, e whole thing is —5 ag Fushani * d 50 
r, perhaps, the 
ed bie collection. 
atness 
of plants, ás well 
ing them clean; hë 858K reflect, in 
arden the ease is the same. There 
ay all the offences of 
. that 5 s hea 
© 
© 
the nance of an e iy Potato crop: Groun 
b 
— Ways which are permitted in his cultiva- is comfortable in one Dandelions in another. 
= but the reflection of his Let his trees, he 8 them a iceording to hig 
Praa look at t ibitors at the t London | skill, at what he rr earned to bet ko fovea season 
= th WS, and say if this is not so, It is noto- but as fi ing ov m again, removing the old 
. the finest cultivation procee | snags, or . He the Fy bark, s beai — not —— 
Siano e — i gph s- eee of beating up the 
‘te rea gabe ar nséct e they rand dt rile 
on names: it would be unjust to do that: 
mor igit necessary, for every reader can find around 
uarters of 
His dirty habits e * being the importance Whitby, o 
„ 
the ‘uncertain seasons of 
amply and certainly repaid 
by the price of the silk as to justify a declaration 
that — rearing of silkworms be 
ould remain the question 
obtained in the fine climate of s one 
of the best in England, could as a guide 
to vince would ha in worse localities. For 
arts, we in¢line to the opinion that the 
attempt to introduce silk into our rural econ omy is 
not hopeless, and that the Lymington trial is satiga 
factory, prov — the profit and loss account is 
made out as is asserte 
It is, however, extremely a ee. it will 
rs, as a domestic occupation. 
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