ee 
THE 
GARDENERS’ 
— NI CLe 
[June 3, 
personal and 
on . be e by the neatness an 
propriety of its outward adornme The pana — | 
would be ag. ugly it aceo 
y by taste in these | 
to thr 
an 
—— bat little ae 18 the meee where they grow 
a_scene 0 disor whi 
e gaze, although it 
kept scrupulously pidh 11 cag i g 2 3 5 g * 
ing our groun in- 
iyi paper will be an 
eral use. 
y be mentioned as one * 
pere of neatness 
Mines wl every 
t be b e 
omin 
the eariy summer 
should ak in requisition, unless badd 
e Grass 
must a any the mowing, so that ing 
of cae may ere on to the walks and lover. beds. 
of destruc 
2 che is 0 0 dyrus lished, the effect 
ooth surf. of the ( Grass and the clearly- -defined 
e gar : 
make the 
n on suggests itself i e 
habit of the peel 5 falling to the ground on Pane sur- 
d. 
plants b N sl sligh 
t ha 
in 
nd, the handles 8 che bag net being held in the 
niy y merely running the ne iai, 
d; or per 
tha ri 
[auffer from their attacks upon our vegetable prod onde 
ceived a num 
esas 2 feet deep), and with one 
of being placed on 5 ene 
hink 
< 
tly swep 
a flower. bed aye’ be made to occupy the 
d 
„care taken Aa yok ssible. 
Often on things a are . be ul they peer 80 
large that an ugly space is removal, 
whergas, if taken in time, there would tare been no 
reeptible res result. 
might appear unnecessary to say pe ina fo 
garden there should be no weeds, did not daily obse 
vation remind ria 108 is neede d. 
i t 
tment. 
he epea of aaya Ke and leaves 3 pam 
of the garde xious to receive all the 
8 85 This work should rts done 
necessi and 
apeti 
staked, tied or pegged do momen ag ath mode of 
poma ‘itis "folly to allow flowers. to re er 
when their 
promote neatness and stop the exhaustive 
— of pe 1 5 As 
e 
3 in ate aver of 1 5 
hile we wri 
m 
| lime have bee 
previously wetting: —— N 
this 1 t the sam 
ard een pr 
aving for their object the rendering of 55 pla 
end to the 
r by 
ey might be jerked into it. 
prinkled over them, 
2 g-ma Sae In 
sam e kind n medies must b 
opose Aa again urnip foc aaile, 
nt dis- 
oating of m  offelisive 
the aay of the 
insect by 
oreing fervent 
dha as Page as possible,— 
PS. 8 
ea and 
belt tied by 
| a cloth * e 
the insee 
that althou 
correct, it is im 
* the greatest serv 
th their broods 
the legs and moved from 
prevent them from ‘ramblin ng away. aye sug- 
gest the possibility of Ema e > resulting n arning 
of Peas; a 
In this letter I “shall pt as I befor 
h Wells’ 
“af received from Mr. som Webb, 
eee „of Holbeck Hall, r Horn- 
8 rms us t a 8 create ee 
ting very serious ravages 
rps in that county, and that he we 
ce from ing several 
of chi ane ay "the ioe the 5 
ea ° e, to 
awa 
teh o 
with p 
Id ples 
xed te the eits oar might 
be easily Petcare d.—J. O 
e 5 5 OF DEW. 
CON ETTER. 
ore 3 
principle of the origin of dew 
possible to explain all the thermome- 
hich their ex 
* eyes or 
ee to we 
antiful 
Habit of industry | n 
~~ may in this 
manner be formed, and the asad of th 9 
kept up without expense. H. B 
Pra W 
Ir biog be Loong be mer consolation 
to so 
pet gh! rikol 
check, and that 
sequen — e families of — cn edaeage | 
aag more extensive, as to 
pur 
cies and idieidus 
rs upon the re 
1e leaves. Of all 
of the test 
theories of 
van who 
the soil, and which they 
during a calm fine night, goat ne taking into account a 
new circumstance, as t e 
oe neglected, which i is 
ew based upon 
lai ; in the 
wadami was a dupean in which the bulb of a thermo- 
as placed, while ied stem 
thak tae e 
N appeared 
constantly ie npletely 
edina v position ; another t 
meter suspended freely between ” plates marked the 
ureof the air. Here a e instruments, when 
diffe: 
that at 
80 
* * che eee were sensibly at the 
to bees ee of Wells’ 
decisive ; that time mab se 
that ie 8 — cold which is in- 
s covered with dew 
, | blackened surfaces, w 
i p 
ra 
sensibly equa 
0 
sed as | § 
that B 
say com letely refute all 
radiati 1 7 f 
xperi the 
aced „upright in the soil, 8 of zine, 
he centre of each of these 
w 1 f., 
| But the: pareina of these 2 
were 1 
soil, i mosphere charged wi ma 
rr 
ith moisture: sal 
r ina ae 
their ted 
tubes su orting t 
these riain wer ere m 8 them, Nor 
h 
ere n DE 
ow ro rs of wa er, ampb and 8 
but we y no means, 8 
experiments, ae that hiir cool on “eal fine e nights 
much as glass or lampblack. 2 
er to be certain of the true state of thi 
t not be employed; the supports 
ings, 
obtain, 
imple comparison with the polished thermometer, 
© degree of cold produced by the radiation of this 
ed 
2 5 7 
means of such instruments as these, I have found 
ves of t 
be 
of these differences, one might be led to suppose that the 
fall of temperature greeks ed by Wilson and Wells, and 
which amounted to seven or eight degrees, was much 
exagge steak ut tie we remember that in their 
mometers for showing the tem- 
aised 4 or 5 feet above the 
earth, while those covered with the radiating substance 
the soil, we can easily see why their 
results and my own differ so much, For Pictet has 
lon o shown that the e of the air 
creases A ani dly, on calm fine nights, as we app 
As to the ee mal von eee, soot and pounded R This fac et alone would a ader the Mae 
— 
= 
hermome by nom 
mometer cov with wool placed at 
a free thermome meter, and _ difference of tem 
er de a 5, Her mo wool certainly cooled 
r three times as tonal en e lampblack in my ex- 
periments and I know that ‘on radiating power of 
is not greater than that of 
other two. Las stl I covered a “sith 
f flannel ee 
These experiments ad janes being 
instead of wool, and the results were 
ke varnished the 
fixed number of degrees, hres ver th 
e night may ow it is clear 
is required for threads then 
the interstices of the wool or cotton that is olde 
of these last will be in contact 12 ai 
than it was at the beginning of the exp surround 
the fal is temp 
medium is invariable, they mus 
colder iner n 
ee 
ody j and s9 02 
erease 0 
temperature in the — 
another cooling in the radia 
