310 THE 
GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
On going to 
8 
with рай, and hard frost set ш at night 
H fell i in with dae | 
ck m 
the n this morning (Tuesday), 
fan inch in "thi 
night miles from the sea, an 
124 feet pre "d YR. of the la es 
559 49 N., longitu 'W. of the 
Greenwich. J. 4 Pheri Саве Semple, 
Easter В father sent to 
1 
mas last u 
unusually Ee 
season? IfI деңер ari 
instances of the pre 
Beurré last season, ^a 
Boom to that effect, J. Taylor, jun, „Иш 
nds | 9 8.1 
atmosphere within the 1 
f 
n ise 
Ww the usual kind, but inserted a 
the 5 Seaton) of the 1 ak, of the chim mney and the 
ing been shut down, no soot cam 
of earthenware. 
imple 
self-acting valve for ope t 
aperture, 
ning о 
thereby Ks. the heat of the 
room, so as to keep it always of 
oreover, this was a con x er- 
or, supposing the 
ory to rise materially, the 
the desired temperature ; m 
d against confiagration, fo: 
heat in any part of the f. 
1 775 would close both the 3 s for 
chambers, 
opular Err 
case of superstition ME. lately came un 
and shes intimately concerns gardeners ; 
ur of mine, a © jobbing Aaken 
ve some Parsley-plants, to 
ongst с 
ed, but luckily the “veterinary su rage (so called), р 
(see p. "a, т 095. purchased packets 
seed fro dvertisers which ES him. 
The Sup 2 both packets tare come up well 
happened to TL e garden he edge, and immedi- 
E id) а 
м ap Len judg a AMI 
to be true t 
various insects, dusting on Peas other young crops 
ta pric When from birds and N 55 : and where 
amateu 
‚ Pepper 
docs м appear to injure рел, and therefore ite uses 
e unlimited. I Mushroom beds 
e 
ce will eat any plant, 
however nauseous; but a good peppering may possibly 
be too much for then. A he Cuthill, Denmark Hill, 
Camberwell. 
Hot-air Heating.— pparatus for warm: 
and M пітасрнтое it. r, by water, or by steam, 
cted wih "existing T or 
een in the 
factories t Belper, in 
the year 1803; ithad 1 constructed A preats aiton- 
tio 
3 a уме 
w gar B gen 
10 9 o put offend 
u by a ae opinion on the — og 7 W., 
Mud. ham 
edar of Lebanon (aan р. 
апу p pe 
Cedar 
263.)—I cannot give you 
e value ы the wood of this 
tree, Mr. 
= 
e thar 
o ARE at p. - 165. You 11 8 2 102 3, m 
“with complete success, although the might as well be produced plentifully all the Wines э 
wh, complete success, эро e might as well be produced plentifully all 
as 0 
the exit of air was a 
and that for the entrance of the 
W 
time w 
edi see of transplanting Pasen, I ma dus thought 
ir guar I 
in his interesting | a 
fath 
[May 14, 
perh babe with much less еы hu. the ue 
y gi 
Bean. entlemen only e to their 
coolly vd the eM к b em lo e 
would n me o EON ү dp ec pl ‘al 
prizem one * о апі “the DE 
o gardener wishes to be 
due deen n 
d a barrow 
c+ 
© 
m 
Ф 
$ 
te 
m 
ct, 
= 
оз 
6 ga N 
08 
zi 
= 
E 
B 
Let an exception; 3 
they have not as ; yet iniu e to iv them ү as. 
hat case alid 
e The uL. an саа ДЫ inv not yet jen. 
bajeg Mee or обрав, such M 
at 6d. or 7d. api iece Ther 
in R ent S 
is another ale 3 
too 
true ? 1 Remember, those ion that have 
rom. eg 
Ж. 
En 
et 
= 
9$ 
Б: 
— 
@ 
B 
er i orld knows that the 
planted n the then forming lawn here, several Planta finest crops of early Potatoes are always produced in 
of it; E vere of the usual nursery size, of pots with plenty of air and heat. A Lettuce house 
them, and those not in all respects the ge now | ought to be low and very airy, with 
measure as He — little heat. Closely shut up and 
Through Girth 1 5 at 3 feet | will not do at all; it is better never 
No Height branches. rise und. owth of a thin an to do so witho 
1 40 feet . 38 feet etos БТ } : Hae. 
2 40 s „ e аспе, Peas and French Beans, if you can get them 
3 5,8 „ e best from two-year-old seed, which does not pu 
These e have om no unusual advan 
e | they are open ag ion, and exposed to the pre- | bearing ; old 
: ity of Pu was Nn the whole of the nei —— mus ; but, on the other hand, a great deal | planted in autumn would he ready by С 
apparatu e-place, air-chamber, and chim of g un id d them been * made, | that force them in " not in А Fi 
was not in the Peu itself, but on the outside of is a they e well placed as to drainage, owing to frame at all. James Си, Cam 
and nowhere communicating with the interior, except the contiguity of a Ha-ha, or sunken fence: the; fects of the late inter e “loin ng 80 80 
by passing in a pipe, g valls, air already raised | the soil in which they grow is of a strong character. |in which a few of our plan Buxus 
: to the desired ‘ature. A similar precaution might | It is interes to observe the variation in habit of this here :—Benthamia fan 10 injured; 
| with facility in regard to most heating appa- Cedar; hardly one of the tree bu alearica and Cistus formosus, unhurt ; PR 
. ratus by water, steam, or air. No heat need to be lost liarities of its own in this respe sot No. 2 is beapiifaliy azurea grandiflora, on an east wall, unhurt ; i 
thereby, since, by nding the fire with either wate its branches weeping to the ground. I australis, a little injured; E. me 
pr air to be heated, the whole heat of the fuel might be 3 Motion that we have a odar, no now ze 15 * For iridissima, unharmed; Gatrya 
imparted to either, excepting only that necessary to|high, that greatly penis d Lebanon, | poin killed; Ilex baleanc: | 
insure a proper draught in the chimney shaft, For а both as to colour and g eral iii o of i habig, but оп | Jasminum. nudiflo orum, against & wall, unin) | 
meh ll apparatus for house warming, the chimney might а you find + bai other | Jasminum revolutum, on m | 
be carried up against the. e of the house wall at | characteristics of the Deo 7 ur f jun.,  Cakley, Li ucidum and Berberis is fascicularis, unto | 
БА mom ig Ps а | by customary mea Photinia serrulata, much injured ; iridis, unin, sube, 4 
f connecting the apparatus with some existing fl Softeni. NP ES. I did not in intend, 40, prapa same i. Брин} niea B 
Me RS M ament is large— Windsor Castle, for | this subject. beyond outline ; courteous | Vaccinium myrsinites, mu | 
example— it would be well worth ructing an appa- | interrogatories of Mr. тА Ы tio, 1 e greatly | rather browned, Of her | 
entirely detached from, the man pile, as was |overrates my "прве sed acquirem nitho ology) | Van Houtte’s, not at all harmed 
‘Suggested in some . relativ. d|ought not to be "um wit кын А. answer І | more two feet 
04 ге, in the © Ме 2 of. чуз 28, 120 hasten, water cannot possibly | uninjured ; Epi 
at there is n (ой, in eonveying a | injure the bers pas lini, ae it ‘that of the pe orthat| E. mu um, 
distance, was AME ted in the Crystal mo in 1851 ; of the ing bird. p the most delicate and | Jasione pe 
smoke is teg conveyed to a.considerable distance in | do T cs of any T in the (for months | but it was a moved plant | 
а mansion, по ві erected, where, to get rid of if you cho in water, and it will come out the better | * latycodon gran ái 3 | 
. 2 mokas the E of it has been carried | for it, verifying the old saying of the ponb, * merces | Statice pseudo-arm 
far v ag a subterraneous channel. | profun undo! pulehrior evenit" Oil, on the ,or|a bank; | 
The danger arene я ==, foul ier shafts has been an му: substance лаах, must do ed ih indleyana, much injur | 
inereased since the abolition of 8 boys. | that i 1 10 1 arly impos H to affirm | speciosum and * 
hts eannot be well cleansed machin тегу, that a bind lubricates P [on Sien with the contents of are coming up very 
the ju- | an oil 8 „is a and untenable proposition. I can permit me to add that Co: 
ntly | conceive t used by the late much-lamented | bed, is quite unhurt, 108e 
r. Той s may do for the rudiments of taxidermy ; |in a peat bed. While writing, I 
bat it will be deficient when applied to the higher opera- | know whether is a con 
ions of this art, which on very 2 ely in the a plant of Lili "un 
mare of modern improvement, Charl es Waterton, | bulbs at the crown instead of flowers. 
on Я 
Winter Vegetables and Salads.—Every gardener who | they have all bene. up and are do 
has called upon me ofi late has ра ер uch pleasure have add t on the night of 
at the 2 of the Ho al Society having at ister thermometer, in an exposed 
last perceived the necessity of encouraging winter vege- from the ground, marked 7°, or 25° 
tab ax) Р І о doubt you will see the | В 
Society’s tables crowded with tender and choice thi 
„next winter. Garde е finest spe- 
cimen plants, by a little application grow t e E ot пш. 
tables and salads. Seder ` you may ha 0 
owed. а Scarlet Runner 10 feet high, rn Ma pa 2 WESTWOOD | w 
з and upon it, in May 1834, | V.P., in the ch y Donation of books | , th 
nce Sulivan, 5 by | the library Mer of 
„Др. M Ша Ts them in à uld, and | Berwickshire Nat 
fuie Beans De Saussure, &c., 
