ED CATALOGUE is now 
—4 ssemma Every purchaser of — 
on 
Gea 8 
i g Wasnsan Ai ablished 1786. 
ING PELARGONIUMS 
—— — — in Vol. I. of The Florist,“ 
d. This work may be 
s e 0 
for lds. 6d, 
Dec. 23, 18 ee. id 
_ Sox's IMPROVED ASH-LEAVED KIDNEY |* 
This is the most prolific and best Early Kidney 
TATO.— Good sound sets 15s, per bushel, from the 
i Lenzen and Son, Nurseries, Kingston, Surrey. 
——— ieee 
fie Gardeners’ Chronicle, 
SATURDAY, DE SERER 23, 1848. 
P Bast and Co., Seed Merchants, Ply- 
c 
cured abundantly, ` We all know ¢ 
admirable a fruit as it is, 
apparatus 
o the flower garden it 
val ae Earl 3 
builders of a that it 
j Zoological FM. 
Tramin, ite 2 af faber 5 z$ ~ 
espa, — r 422 
tie 2 r. M 
respecting Mr. Krn's mode of cover- 
zee trellis . MOVEABLE SASHES remain 
k given, in order to complete the account of 
uch the ground in front, and 
A is also better 
trellis must to 
j2 feet- or 23 feet at back. 
not be more than 6 o; 
E may be . = reach 4 the middle of 
“Sete tom ithe sid If the trellis does not 
the gr „ or if the ground is not 
5 É ng 
o touch, then the trees can easily be e placed 
ising enough, and all difficulty on this point is o 
| 3 8. on which the sashes rest should be 
‘ outside the trellis, and 1 foot higher, so 
— distance af anai a foot between the 
e frame consists of 
i wats; the latter are spak The trellis itself is 
ns common pantile laths nailed 
. to battens 3 X 2, nailed to — 
' apart, and front. 
Ta are a by ae Rivers * a 
—— 7 en . Ker. The same 
1 are — 5 not a mortise is made, 
‘Pa plane used, nor are even ONTGOMERY’S 
nece jeder. Each sash is 
and has three rows of 
; the other foot is 
age’ bars and side 
a op lg 3 X 4 inch 
: : to overlap each 
7 formed by similar pieces | w 
3 in Aash with the rails; an 
d Tail and bar 
top and bottom rails. The 
rai a by, and at 0 
tothe middle r se i 
0 the under side, holds 
very rough contrivances, and 
g smart is looked for, they will not do. 
pay 1 is wanted they answer every 
ven necessar: K aint them. A 
fond in the windo —— R 
S| on i o te ect. 
pur them for sale 
qua 
= 3 to notice the CULTURE or American 
ENGAL, = first thing to determine is 
the see 
Cor IN Ben 
ho le . for s 
climate as 
temperature, very little 
share of 
evidently possible to prop 
throughout the year. Thus 
March and A th and again in pakas 
ar — Fou and 
e — 
The earliest account which we have — the culti- 
vation of ae in Bengal, is that 
Bess, then of Dacea, i 
by the Last India 
astonishing beauty and finen 
further stated to be an in 7 oi aam om crops 
ar, one bein ctober E 
ile 
inks 
2 er being more r 
7 
ies in t 
e spinni 
= 55 Mr. 
Lams, long a nt at 
n 1831, says that the Cotton pe is not in favour 
i sii the the 
farmers, more —_ 
fallen from 5 to 33 ru 
to ae 4 5 mig insects, from rain and 
inund, 
been early attempted, for 
Dr. 
the Bourbon Cotton as psi 1 aig ig about 
more | 
20 years, 
elevated, 
licable, Early Cherries, 
eed Apricots, my be pro- 
and Nectarines alone | Co 
that t the 3 
d summer shrubs, that 
Forage which had generally had 
would 0 their 
of tw 
tt i sizes, y glazed with glass of difere 
agate a Aerie M 
e 
In the ermat parts 
n October, and reaped ín 
975 Er less subs 
The 3 appears to have been — rc 
to 6 e states 
lucted, and the price from 53 to 6} rupees. oaks Beco * J — 
ssypiu ceum, 
intelligent Stale of peg think Mag care oe mee 
— within a few 
years. It is, moreover, an — cro Pra liable 
The. ear of American Cotton ape! ted r | 
OXBURGH pei 
em 25 
er n 
be had by this 
eat expense of houses and 
to be not less 
~ 
three 
nt 
sown in 
plant is 
falthe 8 
p af 
own ees “producing cloth “of 
2 
bean, — 
ice had 
and from 
3 ee ee 
unt of the 
N wane 
at Akra, a place 8 miles 
active measures were com- 
1830. 
upon discontinuig the experi- 
an unfavourable 
“The Committee ascribe the 
their positive i ignorance respectin pi: 
le pr i 
for sowing, to the land (w heh ng proper season 
he rapidity and luxuriance of Vegetation 
abundance of wood, * l 
2. By an alm 
nang paai 
tained maturity 
the staple in the OP a 
the general result of short 
sign of too 
ing process of 
dvheurting the ao 
and oe 
— 
2 
— 4 
produce, an inv ariable 
was, ne owing to pe 
e observe, “ 
these stumps Arow i s 
season of 925 t year, were yy $ run 
hoed up at i 1 of rains, and 
S from December to May, 12 963 Ibs. of 
ng "seed, g au per 
120 ges fet) 144 Ibs., hie alter 
¢ ie, seed, gave 404 lbs. 
the vax ry elan! by . off the 
to the hai 
the 2 of 3 iding a tolera 
Was 80 
accidental i as to be 
culture would ve ei 
— 
mittee, after making een 
deductions Artin his estimate ide. 
„ concur in his 
mmittee having had 
bag pes such ey pe 
ements fo a — years longer on a small scale, 
as 5 acres would have answered as well as 500 for 
grow American Cotton in Dacca. 
ns sere e . with the En i 
his experiments. Yet, as the A 
e a citations grew and bore flowers ar 
fruit, not not for a short time phe but for months 
