| 41848. 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
= rs DEODARA ! GEDRUS DEODARA FROM SEE 
. beg 10 
eall the iiaee of —— 
e larges 
yas above valu he 
— NN 14 Pot, in pet, 
ne busby plants, — 0 ‘oot, in pots 
5d plants of the 
1 PASIOLEF “RASPBERRY. 
to 
— nO Majesty" 
— TREES, 
18 
s of Peach 5 2 im 
— rs 2 les, teooseberries, — 
ere, Pears, . obtained from the Lorden H et. 
sony. 
2 of 
3 Garden 
ns ast inet of 
— 
Several 
WHITETHORN. 
000 rmouth Nursery. 
at 3s, 6d. per 1 
nts raised from Seed, carefully selected 
sending oa the oma 8 free ehy post, for 78. 6d. 
Pre 
R 
ow ready for 22 and may be obtained 
The same comprises his stock in * neral. 
SEEDLING PELARGONIUMS._A w 
CATALOGUE ny f the above may be had i 
one postage stam 
y oiy Cottage, Isleworth. 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1848. 
1 of our aden tony Terri recollect that some 
months since we rev ook written by 
Rates, recommending fruits and 8 
Ra 
rong, eee 
ually w 
ella 
ion of man, as w 
universal practice ot equally opposed to 5 
We ouly lade to this b book now by way of illus- 
tration. That food can be recommended b 
ing and destructive malady. 
Bes ben reccouly ps “forth to the public that, as 
å precautionary measure, fruits aud certain fofoa 
of eke feet abc S sasi be avoided, in order 
of Asiatic — Ha 
| Poke 
) eimi = Vain age we the grounds on which 
assertion is made, t the moderate use oft. 
condition of the 
as ~~ mere ol woman’s 
ou that the “ plum season 
vith them. 
and ee 
7 kd s of unr ka wit 
ot 
5 , but 
quantities or qualities of either. To 
objection to fruit and a mixed 
e far fro 
8 diet, this fact proves 
apprehension Si H would 
kitean the 
n 3 
N ss us is quite as en chat. —— 
5 DM, and especially those who 8 
millions of fine . eee for Planters and = 
NBLUOMED SEEDLING GBRANIUMS. ee 
4 through the community, so as , ee aye namay 
O | first cultivators of Sea 3 -Oia — * r 
and t 
bad re 
oned a * die speedily we know in 
| carrie 
n annual in the south of Euro 
M 
It is true that 
oc casio 
t 
bined this diet with st 
who suffered most 
Under these 3 we feel bound t 
our warning voice 
which the perusal of t on 
likely to produce, and we are glad to find that we 
are not alone in this respect. The Dai ily News 
of 23 last says 
“ We stated the other day that we thought the 
ealth about diet were in- 
hye drinks, were those 
holera. 
o lift] co 
dir wets ‘of the Board of H 
judicious, and we are glad t 
om 
robable consequence 
o, and to prepare the 
is any cg for alar 
e these ee A early, in 2 hope of 
eee an evil which falls heavily on a large 
class of “industrious, hard working men—we mean 
the market gardeners, and those whom they employ. 
During the panic about es diet, so unneces- 
sarily produced in 1831, 
at more 
tious of diet to bodily health will now be diffus a 
serious consequences that a m the consump- 
ion of i r or the eee naa proper, 
kinds of food. * 
against the alteration of diet | with 
- | SPALDING considers a 
or ihe 
a 
dalk diet than per. | i 
ring on a state in which there |¢ 
in 
tn T ortunately, 
1 dry became kno 
. 3 the Sen Pato 
obse 
pa 
latter it is 5 
each plant takes its — 
voided. 
r eultivation of Cotton the ground is well 
which are about 10 
bread 
ridges are mower 
80 la 
wing, as the 
ore vigorously — when t 
in freshly ploughed and loo 
ni 2 inch p along the 
sower follows and = 
which is — 
This — 5 
— a 
holes, which are made at — of aby — 13 
on the top of the ridge. 
plants make their appearance in five or six days, 
— wife ae out as soon as they put forth the third 
In hese’ ag prep a detail the culture of | an 
American Cott 
Cruz and of Yucatan 
it was early Stod — 5 the West Indies. The 
ly hit an oppor- 
mens of Goss 
We have late 
med ure plants 
which originated in 5 a were —.— 
designed culture, have bec 
ter if similarly e 
any tendency which is once sven to a plant may 
ed on from generation to generation, by a care- 
ful attention to the opp, of all disposition to 
depart from the new ch 
ce 
ists — to a single on 
aise Calientes of 1 ` 
ence we may suppose In 
d pre 
2 one of mn 
obtaini 
a8 its loosening the soil mail and E 
as | assist i „at the same 
s | situdes o. A 
urth 1 operation formed by 
psem out with the hoe all the uous p 
weeds, i vs Pe ges with 
wee en 
plants are 3 established they are 
„an 
oom 
keeping it e 
AN they p revent 
The Cotton plant is on — — 
root, which, sodet to the d 
ason n, will penetrate from 2 to 3 feet i 
ind perhaps not more than a 
lant may be fine looki: moist 
sp hete are only short roots; but in a dry 
roots having penetrated deeply, obtain a 
Wee from a greater extent, and are 
in drying it, a 
al much seri extension sb she the roo 
seaso. 
supply of. 
necessarily 
So with Cotton itself, “the indian species, which 
gr 
better age to bear ye — and the vicis- 
Cotton g sown tow. 
lands to Pec 
for five B this, the New Orleans 
anid the the Georgian Se Cotton, are 5 cultivated 
n India w e fin d w Orleans 
” 
a perennial 
rican Cotton = employed in in Beng: 
the plant as few months paa before 
bearing, and fs i 11 3 is a triennial plant here, not 
an an s in the United States.” But Mr. 
SPALDING observes that, “where the plant 8 
large it yields no return of Cotton-wool to the culti- 
vator,” and also that “the Sea Is Sotton was 
very s ae to this 
o Geo Eve 
t 
ern States leaves the soil in a mois 
state, aid that it is schema or et falls o of 
i as well as in the summer, and this 
in a climate which we have seen is upon the whole 
a moist one, and where, consequently, some difficulty 
1 
roduces varieties | t 
ry. The i 
5 — 
0 tm a smaller bush and 
when there is a ten- 
dency to the production of. 5 But vhe 
of the Ake while the root continues to 
deeper, and has thus t 
less Ar at the very time 
ts of vegetation have eely, 
ialis of a moist season, the = sing 
pes, spread little, and 
he size p = 3 dette 
portion to t 
<a — — ther eame” w) 
comes on. eh ae 0 
ve ound dd not not jes 
easily sap- 
small in 
e hopes f the 
hen drought 
ved 
pear- 
m to him 
| the pas Oro p wood and leaves, to the detriment 
of flowers and polls. The picking season, or when 
om the mi 
of ches js m = of . 
com mi e 
ka 101 the sun, or be exposed to the 2 
If dried under . the glossiness of its appearance 
is said to be improved. 
is experienced in having the soil * dry for 
e may be conside 
