339 Ban 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
[Max 20, 
but si 
ordance with the 
e 
and conse- 
y with the coloured forms believing every 
rule to be defective ig does 156 provide for this best 
e long s — that 
re- 
to fin 
of proportion in every part, which, in an object of 
such simple form as the Tulip, is essential to its perfec- 
tion. It also possesses the additional advantage 0 of 
being easy of bed. ae eee ver petals of unknown 
eties are ted t we 
a wa 
be 
line perpen- 
e, adding about en of an 
margin o petal ought to have; th 
of a mp , We may y determine the 
quality of the Tulip itself,in point of 
closing my o ations, it may, perhaps, = ‘desirable 
to reduce the p les we have been discussing to the 
form of rules, for our future guidance ; believe 
vis 
us trap. Dahlias, 
eee! W eo fort renner while the weather 
continues dry. Preve undue development of the 
pra sr Polar or the —— and beers shoots will be 
weaken The e syringe must be used daily, and 8 air 
kept Som by ae the mothe: occasionally, it 
a free circulation 2 ae is a e ritie al 
ent l e vaaliin in the 
Seleet om Leg in the houses for the last batch of 
| Strawberr: 
GARDEN 3 SHRUBBERIES. 
aff with m Evergreen shrubs 
recen tly transplanted — he vain both in the roots 
and branches. Wi es frequent examina- 
tion; it is as well to remove unnecessary shoots * once. 
out eee may be eee i with; trans- 
a Iceolar 
a little soot round the stem will be a E) er 
N GARDEN AND ORCH 
a get weather continue dry, the necessity of 
wa the Onion, Carrot, and ~- will e= 
— — plantations of Aspara r Seakal 
must be kept moist ; a sli ere of — — 
ts. 
let the young plants be 
thinned and transplanted, ift too thick ; keep the ground 
loose and open about young plants ; 5 gti 
and ria e tm jari Mu 5 oom spawn 
Fruit trees. — The development o d taken by wall 
of w 
xi ine “of the late fine 
trees geneity N the e 
ition of the a * highly 
we epa erh 1 the owen as com a se 
What cons pre 
most na description 2 
tion of — in che —1. Eve 
its greatest perfection, should b be er in its outline 
throughout; its depth bein width 
across from 
tip of the 
composed of six petals, three i 
which * all be of the same der ee such 
a form enable them to ve — circular 
outline ; their eir edges being even, stiff, path ooth ; and 
their surfaces free from 1 or S of every 
kind. The 1 of the petals should be amply 
any enge — . 
the flow 
4. There should be exact unifo ormity ‘oben the — 
— of the cup aud the outline of the upper margin of 
. 
stra, 
so long, there as eae 
worthy of n — —Migland Florist. 
—— —ͤͤ — 
Calendar of Operations. 
(For the ensuing Week.) 
CON 8 AND GRE 
One great object in p us 
weather, argues a condit 
ot ecessity of watching their 
may pes be enforced if an un kerar growth 
be permitted, m en remain eee 
and punn ere sated shoot 7 
extension of young te 
efiected. 
State of tl b London, fi ding May 18, 1848, 
» Chiswick, 
BAROMETER, || THERMOMETER. | wing. || Rain 
GARDEN EnGInEs—One of the most useful of the small ki i 
a poe dey 6 d b; 1 Stock and Sh is 
end well N 
3 
a young — re this sh. into 
as made two . and cut it off e Oot when ig 
has pushed. || ntirely when the grag 
InsEcts—X Y—Prussic acid is not a substance e Wi 
— with safety ! — the hands of carele 
be the source of accidents, b 
think they would be ked 
a thelr great resemblance to 
pete 1 —T S P- We should not much regard the 
subsoil, provided vo E can relieve it of all 1 Superfluous water 
rain ough dre parsing: h with li or lime rubbish, 
with ti 
n 
u o burn as much as possible of the clay, Burnt 
clay is excellent material. There is no need of a layer of 
clay bene — rubbish of your lawn, We misunderstood 
your questi 
NaMES OF Pua m Young—Zichya villosa,—W I—Ar. 
thropodium gree ——duba — Caprifolium proin 
the Italian variety ; — — 0 is something like flexuo. 
sum; a Leptosperm L. ruscife. 2 
a greenhouse — e alpina; the 
Crassula tetragon Glenleven—Al 
* wirer — Vanilla plagifelia, the true Vanilla; let 7 
Subscriber wd pre campylus petulifoline; 2 A 
mbac. — T §—The Litchi, 
Dimocarpus 
H ML ope e 8 43 Poly 1 all such 
„ are classified.—J T—Poly, vulgaris. 
G en n: Clematis grata. 
oseph Merriman and Co.—Your netting is — 
neat article; perhaps rather too light, unless 
doane. but how îs — priso as compared with other 
rials ? and how does it last ? 
8 0 se ** — are diseased. They W ee 
te from which experience shows that they may 
—Hybrid Perpetuals ; consult any of the great 
Su estima For 
Compactum. — sorts: 
gram’s Dwarf. The scarlet piao Beem — about is not a true 
scarlet, but a Pelargonium having a near approa' to scarlet 
in the brilliancy of its flowers. 
Tue LAUREL—D C er —- Laurel was brought 
England from the n rhood of Trebizonde, There is 
no evidence, that we nla 2 that it is a native of the Levant, 
mong Croci 
30.240 
30.175 
30.126 
29.996 | 2 
29.653 | 29.482 
29.404 29 
29.680 29.382 
0 
00 
00 
00 
OL 
OL 
29 Sas 29.762 
13 
13--Ve nd dry; 
3 v “fine ienie ht el 
E = ‘ enn 
f the week, 9 deg. above the av: 
for the 
s 
No. of 
Years in 
which it 
Rained. 
Greatest 
Bain. 
Average 
Highest 
Average 
Lowest 
Temp: 
Mean, 
Temp. 
exhaustio 
rs 
. There can 
888 
riesen] Temp. 
3332833 
22325 
3888888 
maris bo èr br io m 
asss 
ee 
nn 
> 
* 
— 
——— BD OD 
The highest temperature during the above period occurre tl 
reri = i 1341 —therm. £2 deg.; and ove period, on ae sate e Bith 
Notices to 2 ace 
g berries, if you 
on 4 account injure the foliage. 
for the follow. 
1847, No. 
w of no — book; but tables of 
Scattered thro 
i 
seeds lie 
1 Sd e for a ~s A P as rs, e, g. the . e 
sow anr pe two different kinds of se 
Tropæolum pro m 
3 or * iculty with any of them; they all want 
heat and sel bet wet.—4 Subscriber Six 
would-be ere 5 The — 18 
Phanogamous ts wi 
Sabani ro * Flora Nee xcursoria.“ DUNS 
— akna — 
1 
| Emionarron—J H O-o 
do not like te. say—perhaps Boston; but we 
* 
Misc - Croydon — Such circumstances a of 
common ; they will probably flower jase as well, al 
Peru flower the first year.—. e do not i ord 
appearances you describe i see Pear-trees that we 
examined. Youghal — We do W. — 
seedsman obtain some for you {to C—Your Grapes = 
— leaves are sunburnt but how, we are unable 
many of your seedlings 
the outline 5 the bottom of the flow 
of oe defec Som gre gher Bavo tee 
1 
748 ie. well form» 
t is well form 
d decision. The 
velty an ec 5 paT 
os. 
olou 
cipal defect in your flow 
specimen of form ; 
s; the colour is not in 
mar — — 2 
edges 
ness. It lies flat as will de > found a i as i ery inferior 
R F G- Both in si: jo; ey aro also 
to ge show rg g te baten ; the ee 
in form,*——J 
is distinct and fine, but ine marking uf rales tou 
our se ale but tè is n — small — 
been b, e, 8 e, and 
marai” 
Prruxias— C—Both your seedlings ne ea 
be want N as they are car pi 
ow very commonly piae sr e best. 
RHODODENDRONS —. 
too narrow — de fring ed on 
colour, and in the spotting ca the 1 
— — Soe too wide 
ects are in the © form 
our seedling is a 
forin, the indentations 
oe e surface wants smoothness. 
As usual, ma ommunic: 
‘ee r ore re nag voidably 
inquiries can be made, We must 
. r 
eure of the UPR 
