70 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
[Jaxdog 
walk be nee wie sherchopt be arranged in like 
_— _ = and varieties ; but 
few 
shrubs, or small ati 
Rhododendrons, and Seatlet Pelargoniuias. 
stri and amusing, and cares, 
‘would hele oredtly inightened - the extent of surface 
to the eye by the undulations ; and i having te 
Stabe ¢ groure in tri new. objects» would be seen 
ype vhs 
dept biter ‘See ng Florists’ P lowers.—W. C\, of 
wg ie ct 4 pred ander the direction of the Flori- 
tural Society, membe thers ribe a 
sum retype. to the value of the seedling, including the 
whi $s awarded, a 
. to h 
Pe elargoniums, a twelvemonth ‘previ 
howling: what a stimulus itw 
unt mig pay 
Mophediots uce enough for a 
‘opening an Orange which 
e seeds were found to have germ 
S$ quite: perfect, an 
to the naked eye no Senda oe porctptitle through which 
co he en inches 
wh 
a ighe? ; in the same circum- 
ewirenae regard to ht ‘ed iam Barron;: eieites 
ear? Gardens tig ws 5 
y " 
amabiisis called “* Lycopodium 
if 
Raise an Early:Cr of Peas.—The 
Lap forming car soy enact 
of 
;. they: also »pr 
m the Peas are to be 
T lift the — a ie = take 
seep 1 rooted, 
i to the 
+a ‘drill cut so deep that 
inh lw ey were. in’ the 
“protect.them from frost 
d. this. may. be done by putting 
rows and laying some Jong 
Ss 
e 
a prepared bord 
pots, p p the fron 
_” of the pinery, having nl — hs es ms the end 
nhouse, 
me the re they? produced abun 
ked ign the 
igs ; as 
wat excop just in 
Climbing P. —The way I train yon plants 
good effect vith ti re > their rambling ins 
ores many p wing them ve 
in the =a 
the plant, the = Sas pi 
3 I first train the plant 
-B 
up'the 
gin 
till the flower-buds 
re most ornam 
me more > intelligi 
on in a oesiags this =r 
with me 
greenhouse ; the 
trude through the 
at every remov: 
ow many fee 
rey ie be Ms. I 
the ee with liquid manu 
Qe —Can your 
np. 5 “tell m 
uranium, called’ Pom 
ed with “me 
tainly aliv e3 verifying, so 
easily kep 
grown 
hole, 
al are pea rare shortened, 
find the plants vm all injured sty this treatmen 
m t high, covered with its 
eo give fresh soil to the 
XE. X iy Lei 
und nden tC. A Pea. 
me by what other name ihe Citrus 
e d’Ada 
8 is ree 
the torpidity of the Orange in nie former 
vation of Seeds. —To preserve seeds intact 
e string, an as soon as it has grown to the top, be- 
to coil it ane tant the Neopery and ‘so go on 
as soon as thi is 
so as to cover the trellis, 
in a neat state 
ental—the kesh may, perhaps, 
I do not 
nt, and 
wor) 
name, a8 well 
ages.—J. 
sackeniny: or being affected by surrounding damp, oar 
y which th soon decomposed 
ey are so 
and d 
estroyed, 
esideratum. Now, the seed bi the Lycopodium 
An th WV dldidconinn n’s Cure an 
green turf, sufficient to cover the 
hi 
oy ante even on =— — 
the furnace.— R. Arno 
with. Scions ane tment than with 
differ a little Ham him, as I consider 
plants i resent 
will stand out of doors 
months, but it = make Tit prog 
. it is ae in enho 
en the tem ree anim 
of the Gesneras, for its 
who proposed to 
matted roots of which ‘the -em 
with 
21; the 
s that. Gesnera en 
use. 
™m 
“a a eectie: object. L think thi 
sh — 
plant 
self. f—J, 
@Scadow 
cee 
ere isa 
tha 
55°, — he says the 
€, quite sufficient 
win 
uring 
ha 
of time it flowers, an appening 
little else is seen. I have “eo aa 
a them for the o oe air di 
greenhouse; b 
off young oleae 
uring summer. 
ha 
none of them have s suceeéded ba 
my! will effec 
t the 
ture, 
sh the judo Kin 
pu 
cured, 
is in my own family and on others. seve- 
boi ater out ‘of | a 
Cc 
at thin ti 
after it is eut- down the are at 
atson. 
paragraph by 
vr. Gesnera 
the sunimer 
‘ 
mer, as well a 
ted t 
must still differ from his opinion, having ervabetiey: 80 much 
~ 
= 
oI 
&, 
e 
a 
Qa 
aie 
1 
co 
oa 
oO 
“35 
is 
ot 
he ot 
af 
mn 
Oey 
~ al 
o 
o 
= 
> 
i=) 
as) 
i—| 
co 
= 
t= 
tj) 
- 
ow 
gq 
wr 
4. 
‘ 
fryers 
a as those that were regularly kept in _ a where 
in winter ranges from 
orein 
Pate with ue 
ie Gardener to J. B. Han ankey, 
maiden the a a April spin 
of soda 
*to give nitrate of soda a fair 
mee rass-land particularly —G. G. Watson 
Gen Citrus.—T a 
that the. ped fault Ifi 
us his ‘ w 
ad 
gees = the 
aces, I 
Citrus bigarddia myrtifélia i ienot.-a apte 
And again also, when he ys, that ‘the: genus s Cit 
ras 
ve by proof on a matter 
nify wld 
the mowed y their noble, healt = rod a 
appearance: ‘all summer long—(Sir R. Fre ~ ‘The | 
erenc di fie erent mode of w 
e. If wintered, as in France and ec 
and \well-aired hous 8; 
es, and I have no 
conclude Ra. tieacors by an’ ‘* ergo 
sane queestio et: argumentum’’ on my side of the busi- 
ness.— ason, Necton Ha 
Lost C: y— Hitt, in his work on — trees, mentions 
a Cherry that he scr near in Lincolnshire, 
called the Baram ihe 
fruit, but a o— tree, a 
soil; and: 
aeaece 
ur reade 
anything known of.this va riety > ?. It seems valuable, both 
as tea he ‘bearing where other Cherries do not, t, and 
as a dwarfing stock.’ 
Ass — Certain 
g st 
am Tea.—* Pa Imam 
who, consequ nore 
extensive cultiy. 
entire = oes having determined, and given 
ar amet that the Tea-plant of China exists 
and for this the Agricultural Society 
