THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE, 
O A 
— W SEED CATALOGUE is now 
uk enten © “ig 
hwi i E. Resour ‘and 2 Seed Merchants, Ply. 
Establis 
LEAVED KIDNEY 
IMPROV VED A ASHE db ly Kidne 
his is — oye 5 — — Taste, — — 5 
Nurseries, Kingston, Surrey. 
— collection, as as now the price is so moderate. 
rs and sailing vessels to all parts of England, 
i of chee fu 
e in n and h 
4 es ot me 
and she 
iz. „and yri pa i h 
claim. Unexceptionable eferentea will be given. 
— J., Post-cffice, Turnham Green, London. 
SATURDAY, DECEM 
Tomar, 9 7 4 
* wails 200 8 sah 
id E ay Societ ogical P 
: 000 000 „ 7 P.M. 
-n Bauer, ~ pai qi are 
iy E, s 0 oF 
se one of the 
n gardening, the adoption ex- 
the agency 
n es; in the autumn t 
è iome earthen pits with them 
= 
a 
[ execitte i ina thousand other | i 
he obje ection that is taken 
at a very in 
ust ooking cdam ivance 
e pu 
Y 
ry purchaser of Seed | 
BASH, and LANGE LIER 8 BEURRE should in a 
th 
1 gee oe hee has had much 
be 
up 
Hie Gardens IS e eb 
1848, 
m, shelters some l 
ces = Violets and early spring in 
h of 
ng, a 
a trellis, to age s Shs 
sin 
at t the fruit will ripen from 10 days to a fortnight 
ser tha x wall raah and tla is importan 
or 
deny t the wali’ of — aids as bei 
It is argued, that o 
model we are indebted t 
bridgewor th, by 
genious plan is thus described b n, in th 
appendix to Mr. Rivers’ very useful heel work 
“ Miniature Fruit Garde -A 
n the autumn I prepared a border from 50 to 60 
feet long, drained, &c., as for a wall border for 1958 34 
In this the trees were e pla anted i i 
k 
— 
feet were inserted, back nt; to these 
ts was nailed a plate, 23 inches b o this plate 
were nailed rafters every 5 feet, to receive the lights, as 
hothed frame, and these lights (5 feet wide and 1 
t long) were slightly fixed by screws to the plates 
are very roughly made, the wood not planed, a 
the bars of the lights were cut out at Mr. 
n banked 
S0 as to let the earth be as o the tr eli is aS pos- 
i have recived all the heat 
m the The sides and back and front are en- 
tirely open, the curre air i cone „and there is. 
room for the gardener to train, disbud, and syringe the 
trees without removing the l The advantage ob- 
tained is the enti he blossoms from frost 
d cold winds and rain, and = — ional heat from 
glass during the blooming s About the be 
the fruit aus 5 well set and thinned, 
e. 
8 
T bilit 
-|a 
aut or ure the well ripening of the 
wood, thus obtaining, with, no more trouble than with 
* 
oH 
Gii 
ii 
A, back support to plate; B, front ditto; C, the tree planted 
in the border; D, the = rder, y feet drained ; E, the trellis, 
with the tree trained on i he glass lights ; U, dotted line 
shows the earth . * 1 the trellis; E L the line of 
the grou 3 
tion of the 
by lay ing on the bo 
n felt t ‘orig 
spri 
common net was ee s front of the | his 
nt succeed 
wr passing 
ing planted my pent ti 
nd I had a very fair er 
eg: 
that on the „ as 
1 i 30 the time of the year when fruit is E the 
nen whic 
5 
sides open, as 
As the whole cost 
reat 
tly, w aac 
MI care for. 
Por this | Pears 
degree, ng curre 
n the lass and the 7 Not 
rise 
rries sequel, n free from the diseas 
o Mr. Rivers, of ge re oe kinds o f Beaches, which hitherts i Tes therto it has 
Ww re 6 it has ifficult to fruit in ic pips consider 
contrived for the purpose of carryi gva are regards the better kid of late Peaches, which 
BELLENDEN Kers plan of facilitating the er ly ripen, they will have the additiona protecti 
tion of the Peach and the Nectarine r. afforded by by Sai in bad cen ri eat ensure the ripening of 
D 
e crop eyen 
ould 0 een Niten — “Kinds of fruits which it 
hitherto been fo 82 dificult to fruit by reason of our 
om chat I may try them under the glass this next 
yea 
e advantage of this method of treatment is thus 
À described by Mr. River — himself. 
o the vee reg I saw Mr. 
— the end of last Aug 
found them, —— vy planted — — * March, 
od of 
being merely a of 
ack and front, on which are N plates and 
eross bars for the lights to rest on, having exactly the 
ga 
not, has a very extensive application, 
and which seems likely to “4 orm the commencement 
of a new era in 2 
ject. Much has 
ers who are so un- 
fortunate as to 3 flour made from 
re to be loud in their com- 
r 
that they ripened their seed Tat 3 
Te then conceived the notion of i 8 oP 
gour of species by g delicate and te 
the tre ud of the Grass with that of Rice, and found the 
e he wall, I con. grains produced by the grafted plant much larger 
fr than those of ordin se grains were 
rom the first sprout more vigorously, and, in the 
ec bBrusone, 
requent in newly 3 up fields, while 
ordin — rt sown in the same soil m less pro- 
e and the plan The difference, 
h in the height of the plants and in the produce 
amounted to a thir d. The grai 
size in the tib cases. He also 
new variety was less impatient of drought, and, in 
whic 
. 
and | consequence, expresses a hope 9 it may be pos- 
to cultivate it w 
sible only sufficient 
water to keep the soil moist. M. B. 
T the seeds of the Horse CurstNot contain 
w 
state, unfit for human food. 
ad know that p 
obtained from Hor 
” M. Fraxbix, the di 
