THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
„unless 
. of e or getting rid of 
G.“ would state i 4765 . * and 
Night Temperature of P ves.—I wish your 
correspond 
bottom) Mr. "Fem ming Mere uring 
am in 
ho 
ing a we sje cal than soi Te, ning,” ave 
in the presence of MS gy and 1 
my oppo 
will sub- 
assertio i 
manageme 
inquiry is n the heat alone. 
Éve en has fruited good Pin 
if one d 
J. T. ., 8 [Your 7 are f. 
le to themselves than the They evidently 
Cree, of B i Deorum.” 1 2 rn three lectures by a priest.of | are about 4 a in extent ; 
which are pruned close on Mr. arowa, plan will be this modern god of slumbers. Ta n can flower gar — — nds, 
found unsound, if dissected at „where the col humbler classes at nightfall, and mak ™ | acres of garden, which is proverbial for its general god 
peshes ar 5 cut off clos have pur. | merry for an hour or two afte y of weary labour. | order, The principal forcing department is within 
undred Tae, poles (for N 27 1 fave This was lately'done by a en full a walled inclosure to the right of a pacious entrance, 
above 6 eo 455 s D Thackeray, w w near Perfection. His gibes and his jokes, and his mysterious | which divides the gardens from the coach and farm 
enbighshire and Tine and Passes with the hands were am enough, and I| offices on thoxight. The first structure tat mests 
which } ew oes pot for posts and rails, and I can | ¢tjoyed them as a diverting and a frivolou s pas ian Peach house, 56 fect in lengehyin W 
é ll the branches But, when he stood in wrath, and . all of ew me collection of hemums, which bad been placed 
tioned at p. 7545 — when profits are to be ealeul 
it is only fair to ate the quantity of canes obtained 
hives 
pollen ae they, m 
fill the Pee of the old ones as the latt 
| bees on a large scale, a 
upplying them with e 
(say 44d. = mr sii indeed, be a profitable 
e | speculation, if they had the igre of — — aes it into 
“A 8 pä , however metimes 
find its way into hone ri he — bees — . — to 
do with its introduction there 
Tar 
noticed in your pacer has 
o hand you the following a additional 
should 
enquiries. 
particulars * e with the 5 the 0 
be applied boilin ug hot, * m d ef bes: when 
the iron is quite dry, 
ot tar and the iron poe enabled to 
ion. 
thereby eausin 
a harder and smoother 5 to the eye. G. Fleming, 
Trentham min gi Gardens, Nov. 15. 
Mesmeris ssime Somne 
ne quies rerum, placidissi 
ov erboard from Galen * wnwards, a onounced 
* mallet, and Ie 
W. I never found that a 
rowth of the Larch bee 
Pre 
s in x saderah I thought he 
their drugs to be powerle 
| acted wrongly, and it struck me that such a declaration 
would lea r, would be sadly 
to their disadvantage should it please Heaven to visit 
"| them with sickness. s story that 
was 
in their own coin to the last farthing ; ; 
mon e began with him of the 
and peses cut this unfortunate son of Hip 
to pieces, he — foul. of the whole order, aad 
what- 
n 
ave been much pruned ; 
ed his audie 
Sr, 
ring Iron-work. N ne _ method Pid ne 
has sh 
— 
“ere — 
Philip 
e most positive manner that there 
eta knots, flaws, or dead wood whatever in thei 
Planting. 2 S eee upon the econom 
I think, o 
sha fev r reduce d angry 
ecal life's — . —— when at their lowest 
whilst wandering up and dow 
uch di 
E 
O 
* 
Was Over. 
me persuade t 
— of mesmerism that, although it be a pastime of 
ent and aug ter. 
nt it it is dangerous, and mre be fata, "e pae 
„ | cases of disease 
when I amended, ga 
resorte 
Larch} or 
ion of tithe obliges the 
the land be under 
y, when on poor 
d, like mine; the price of Wheat fell too low to make 
it profitable te it could be with trees 
alto- | characters, the aristate anthers 
e | tetralix 
in De Candolle’s * 
o | froma thee proceedings matters of no: 
pe iae Walton-hall, Nov. 13. 
Sorteties, 
sR ee OF Snein Nov. 3.— The President in 
the chair „ her 
s betw 
referred to the perka species by 
Prodi * 
Mackaii an it re- 
eee still inclining partially to 
y its ve rolla, Though 
dy | apparently a hybrid 5 ween th 
in preference to 
e lowly and confiding ad- 
a few minutes of | 
r 
pits have a 
dy |a eircumstance which, in 
aceount, and 
illustration of the adaptation of 
of Vines. The two first divisions 
bottom 
formerly eu 
growth 
alread 
a iai 
lish 
thing is is a good es 2 a child’s press 
wn that h 
derstands 
New Garden Pla: Plan 
of — Epidendrum, — — 
glaucous n ing leaves, and 
į flowers are peculiar 
firs 
July exhibition in n Ye rk W 
only 12 months old, the parent 
he ofthe above mode of culture may 
be briefly described by sens pr — pit, prs gins 
ystem would d hav tan of 
ts. 
THE GLAUCOUS _SPIDERWoR?, 
15 | 
CAR. 8 come ous, 5 ascend 
ate, amplexicaul 
. Flow 
gocasionaliy, Staines, Stamens 6, 
e the petals longest. 
A pests little stove 1 plant, raised in fe 
gerton’s Ore 
y 
with 
Ovules 2 in each 1 
aceous-house, on the 
from — 
little umbels 
Garden Memoranda, 
ngborough-hall, near York, seat of the Hm, 
Pay sel “Buona tr piringa and fruit gardens ber 
which 
removal of which 5 the 
tom- heat, raises the top 
of the inner side of the pit pit 2 the 
of 
e growth 
upply 
mentioned, are 
| the pits are ‘filled with ape 
In 
from the beginning of 
On the back wall were two np S 
elevation — the ground: lere, 
lanted » at a 
the: first 
to the front of the house. iy 
kent, 4 division 
ea iain 
ae 
. 
with hothouse 
rand ar ood 
this m 
