we pos fee, 
T 
32 pairs of very fine 
g- 
ditto 
2 
848. 
coTEE, 
PI 
y aroas o he Anest 
. 
Stands at ea Chiswick, and the 
d Flori 
— “This w 
— a 
Co; have much pleasu 
25 are l. ere sri on rein 
eand w 
te pure én d 
collection. Price 10s. 
indispensable to, 
highly spoken ofin the 
first-rate the petals 
7 — fi: 
otees yet 
ed, l 
free from the mm speed Spot, 
per pair, 
been, successfully eahibited in the Ist 
Royal Botanic Society’s 
last number of the 
e following — has 3 Le sgn e in the 
THE GARDE 
— 461 xt? 
re in 
red.ed: 
THE GEM,’ 10s. 6d. per pair. 
ower 
are 
oe ag ie, oo well formed; of Deg Po pie 
waidually to the — formin 
e n. good, red e 
crown, 
st” of November 1 0 
e hav e grown in Pa gaat poe 
is, or nearly, 
sop FINES ST 9 75 CARNATIONS, PICOTEES, 
ditto 27. 108. and 
newest and finest first class show flowers $ 1 
ditto * ditto 
onicle, Sept. 19 
show — by mame, II. 48. and £1 10 
3 0 
0 
0 
aie 
ansies, . 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. | oc 
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1848. 
Homar, Nov. „p| Che Fo ae 
„ 
mee 
er ef pla 
eee 
will of 
MEETINGS FOR THE TWO FOLLOWING WEEKS, 
e ad 
British Architects 
edical 
Oe ecw * ** 
8 
Bei 
Beeck ne, greenhou a greenhouse 
e plant? 
y very properl 
majority of our read 
a | as somewhat ndee th 
trict, with 4 allege, fence d in — protected 
nts is ee understood than 
ers 
course answer the question in the affirmative 
In 
in the it the Horticultural Gar 
PII 
. 
— winter Camellias lived 
en in 4-inch brick pits 
8 0 a foe of 43° below 
em 
was Camellia —.— 8 still retains the 
wes 
— 
gradus infra 
oe est, 
y 
al for 10 rite 
Iti 13 not an i 
in which the 
n the mids 
(Sic oa cng pen hiemale, 
age een 
aqua 
also cultivated 
place we le 
ozen to afford 
8 
8 
n 
exaggera 
a: in the neighbourhood 
* L large tree, we find th: 
t of rigorous 
nd. In Japan Tuun- 
es us pais oe cold is oe snow falli ing, 
meter dropping to 
g point even in the f 
at ice the thickness 
on and 
occupied in 1 nd. no plant can pos- 
sily be in i N health, or flower more ed 
If we look at the climate h 
porting and 
18 placed by N 
Japan is ite fathers 
*. 
sly. 
at 
ad 
puncium congelationis, inten- 
s e borea 
congelatur 
wet niz cadit, — in regionibus meri- 
all 
in the ache of 1845-6 the Woo- 
the 
tion to say that 
are 
of 
a crown Piece is 
the streets for sale 
to the end of vay 
es. N 
mometer a correct index of the i intensity of the co 
as regards our 
dryness of the 
In the green Tea W 4 yma in the dis- 
trict of Whey. chew-fu, N. L. 30“ in the 
province of eee the See winds begin to 
8 
= 
prevail, the Chinese say, in September. In October 
persons in easy circumstances tor to clothe them- 
selves in their fur nd i 
oually : water ouse ; the 
inese houses. are bien pot . — — 
and doors are roughly fitted; in fact, they are built |” 
for hot weather, 8 for co e Chinese defend 
themselves against cold bya an additional quantity | 
and different gun of clothing: their houses beiug 
thus much exposed to every change of erben 
he Tea men deseribe the cold as less severe; and 
the fall of 3 B well as as ene of the ice, 
s a mountainous dis- 
from ae north-easterly and north-wes rr 4s bine 8 
* 0 
seen ranging themselves 
along the prin — parts, begging alms, and 
ing a 
| exciting the compassion of passengers by strewin, 
hr. 
paddy-husk on the ice, to prevent slipping.” 
In the east a Fokien, 151 . Carrina, long resi- 
dent there, as L that “the Tea shrubs 
were e in pie ed nor ge harvest retarded 
the cold of 92 5 burns there fell in the 
month of 
U BAR SERO NIOLA, 
ed — in va meria 
f gid owing to the force und | ash 
| — aa a floor of death, 
differe 
r 
0 
— is annually frozen 
Y | continuance of the manufacture 
om | hice. , are of saline matters, 
— bear the name of plant vill 
— om their peculiar struct 
for, we 
what acre quantity of 
a wood wou 
the leaves from our p 
g ue 
leaves, w important in 
their car than they were in their Tifo, though in a 
way. 
* learn from the: Wakefield: Journal that 
* on case of injury committed among timber and 
— property, by the acrid vapours poured into the 
1 Works, has been brought to a close 
by the aw — of the arbitrator. In this instance the 
. eee Wakefield was chosen forthe scene 
of devastation, among 8 fair meadows, and 
Nl wooded property. As in other i 
a little tea ee left in a tea- cup over night hedgerows, thriving young eee and ancient 
in h of the rooms will occasionally be found 1 trees, en for their beauty and. his 
in the mo . tio ir timber, 
“ The 1 5 country, in Fokien, differs little — scorched, er, n Ne in : 
from the Hyson district in point of temperature summer they Bees had b all 
ight be ase natural 
rse their — found no 
sses more common sense 
causes,” hoe 
belief. The worl 1 Ma 
than such persons ose. 
e find the ich an to be as follows: “In the 
ATERTON, 408. 
s—which, of course, carry the costs of the 
: 10002. damages for Mr. WATERTON to 
— trees; 1004. damages to his mansion 7 smo 
vapour ; and some other small * 
— mages to Sir W. PILKINGTON for 
to the tenants of both those gentlem 
to their crops. The arbitrator rag directs the dis- 
of salt cake 
defendant has 
pay all his 2 costs of the 
reference ; the plaintiff's 
m 
ii. 
English) i suow in fo. 
spans (49 inches) in Ning. te ; so that the covers to 
the Indigo plants, strongly fixed to protect them | a 
from the frost, s sun, an ae „gave way under the 
weight o e close of the same year, 
about the middle of 7 some days of severe 
cold and frost occurred. 
in the neighbou 
January of the present yeal (1816) th 
the water in the ri o-yang was break- 
ing and flying about “like hig to the stroke = a 
oar. The volume of water in this ri 
that of the , Guadalquiver, at the passage irs Cador. 
0 
same effect 
be quoted, but these psa They show conclave 
that eg Came wild in 
rigorous winters, is . e 
og “thes severity 1 of the seasons is 3 cane 
Sa 
ia in i 
appears 
is 
w | own woods have no such tenderness of constitution | 
ouse. 
a greenhouse 
shall endeavour to find an answer to 
our next week’s publication: 
= ee i do with my Leaves? Are they 
a correspondent, Do 
to demand a greenh 
= 3 lia, then, We 
hy 
they 
to do. : 
all e or e ieee 
but they ta 
sont they con neler est little or no — 
actions and n 
costs een and t bree our ol the 
3 costs of he i st — of the 
ard.“ 
et us advise all those who possess timber in the 
neighbourhood of alkali works to against 
them with the same determination as has been shown 
by or pli in the actions tried within the last 
rein ng t the offenders into court. Thus, and thus 
only, vill they save their property from destruction: 
for it is certain that all the timber near such 
np peu sooner or 2 and t 
upon 
which, in eee, be abated, ex 
that renders works 
3 ATOES IN WESTMORELAND, 
the receipt of your letter of the 14th 
bane giant he er beg = 
ouse plant? 
the question in t 
e best of all 
— KT ol the 
pon * as 
‘inde og y draining, but clear 
pig vant found the 
annex you lists of 17 differs 
is | he ae, guy of ground te eat 
