THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



[Dec. 



anger of being 

 n aside. I believe a cast iron plate alone 

 :; answer every purpose, pro- 

 Tided it is free from - flaws," and the other parts of the 

 stove are made correctly. I observe "L*Bor" G ;; 



State of the question let us 

 , and economy of outlay. I 



ndent, alluded to in the beg 





oily to compare this t 

 i nightingale 



island iu spring. The Cardinal 

 Nightingale (one of which I liave had en- 

 "" ' a good, bold song, 



lveyea*s) 



to others ; and that I consider a great 

 about eight months of the year, but it 3 

 enough in the day, at 



. so easily r paired.— ^ 



experience \ 





H anion, 



To make /'. : Parsnips, whe 



. . ■ .' 



■ ..:. 



: . . m v,.tv iliy, than 



Important feature, iua 



smuch as all work 

















r with the fire cen 









ck or be destroyed, by the heat • 











.; 





being placed bet 







as named in the 



letter of Mr. Wils 





House. The cost of t 









mall est quantity 1 



necessary to sec 





it may be expected to 



d of one bunch of i 



, clothnu; :•'• ■ branch. 



:rs on a branch, it ha 

 iut 2 feet in length, wit 

 stated to be a plant i 



lI 1 was awarded it. From the same n 



Una, bea _ 



helsea, was a fine dwarf specimen of CI 



■iHlens, which me:; l, 



lirough, bearing upwards of 20 spikes 



successfully in a po: a, 

 ite was awarded it. ( 

 . Beck, of Isleworth, 



t (Cephalotus follicularis 



UteTofpSsSuspK 1 * 



wing that with a litth 

 )f Orchids, Mr. Dobson 





va. Aliiu.l; ii.:i Vedal uu awarded.— Mr. Kenrick, 

 \\'.-st 13r..mwich, Im'udngham, sent Zygopetalum 

 imineum, miscalled Huntleya irubi \-.it.-. — A perlect 

 iora of Camellia Donkelaeri was exhibited by Mr. 

 mitt, of (. lauha i, wiio stated that the plant which 

 d produced it had last year produced self- 



>oms were coming as usual, finely variegated.— 





... < . 





nearly hardy evergreen species mhieh 



■ • 

 crises and Cape Heaths, and the Peruvhm IJ..1 '...■ i*r.. 



'"It is evident,' says Dove, ' that a 

 tation produces its rain, winch on t 



tiihy of the soil. Previous to 1821, the 



SS " = 



Country Shows. 



— ThcfiBB i . 1 admired flower 

 was held on the 24th ult., at Jesmond Gardens. The 



the Valley of the Nile towards Libya a 

 contrary effect has been produced in 

 thr: r. h the ex: . 



,,;audria and Cairo, 

 formerly a great rarity, it has since tla, 

 much more frequent.' Lecoq, m t 



. n's Blush, lii 





SET: 



I Son, of Exeter, s 



m Java through their 



t was named Agahm 



year, the objects of ; 1 

 esting. Of novelties, j I 



«ng passage aa a favo»» 

 the soil in Barbabos t* 

 lively; the greatat £ 





tropical forest of th. 



* which may contri. 

 in the preceding remarks". ^Lt^S 



inoco during night, at 0G«;8 Pain-., while 



condensation of vapours has been ably treated by 



Daniel!, in his ' Meteorological Essays' (1-27, j,p. .- J 

 232, 278.) Humboldt considers that forests exerciaea' 

 triple influence upon climate : first, they protect the 



ration of aqueous vapours ; thirdly, these leaves ia- 



>-> . iloi-ding si.. <(, evipuiatiou and radiation, are n 

 inlluentiu), that the knowledge of the extent ol foresto, 



- I a country. The active vitality of 



[ . nts c ns,; be :< i\\ iii the leaves ; they are the organs 

 :>t respiration, digestion, and nutrition. The great 

 quantity of water which they perspire may be easily 



of the Upper Orinoco, 





alike ascribed to the aqu« 



3 upon meteorological p 





e"- '-' ""it.'.-.'-: • ■■■ ■• ■' ' " ' 



a in the valley J and wiuc 



