‘320 
THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. 
[May 14, 
sold for 
00 
he ro n of Nee mla, Cypress trees alter- 
nated with the Chinar or Plane tree, each attaining to the 
height of 100 feet, and, as the rsian verse has i 
#4 Sm each other by the hand, and rivalling each other 
in 
oe leaving ¢ Cabool, on the 13th of October, on a 
j orthward, - halted at Kareez sett ft, 
ich 
on it; 
tinge to the hills. 
bo ng rine of Salieri, dried and pounded 
which heating yo te ab rae the 
ich have 
fet £ if ahie 
o the em. 
er, as * sort 
acquire, as 
they Sn e with admirable care and zeal. ueducts 
were often seen fifty or sixty feet up the hills, conducted 
und every swell and ren ore they a n ed 
t, in 
ro 
out their contents on t Whea 
seldom yielded ies than 7 ag PY Rice, ge- 
teen to eig uwarree as muc 
noes 
tell; ead Windia 
phe Potatoes, 
with a syne asen of mo 
lesen over ay which means Sra are kept ot fresh ti 
vers in the vicinity of Begram (supposed to 
Alexandria ad calcem Caucasi aN Bate found 
x 
to be fs ae | 
and various kinds of part 
to be well stored with fi 
ne is Ww 
ES 
wolves, 
other animals, ve 
ich are hunted by th 
ub 
to ps a turkey, of the partridge kind. 
nd hare: a ate 
Sir Uvedale ships on the eases ak with an Essay 
on the M9 ae oe a d much O| om Matter, iy 
Sir Th ers i; Bark: ea p- 586. Edia- 
Srey Caldwell and ‘- ; London, 
bea n of an ag a work, illus- 
of what constitutes the natural beauty of a en 
the good taste of the author enabled him to perceive the 
errors int the landscape-gardeners of the early part 
of the present century had fallen ; pa! ioe t the fectngs 
which, on ac t of his station i y, he necessari 
possessed in common with the mere of England much 
facilita 
ness in the minds of the higher classes. To 
guage of his editor—‘ The ex —_ and bghly-culivate 
taste which he displays and the nice diser tion whic 
he exhibits in that range within which he rere = mself, 
pre 5: great. ajority of his readers are naturally 
most in ested, has iformly excited the uduitbation of 
ail who have perus will be fou 
Jandse 
level SS was like preferring a ragged sipsy- oe 
Pine-apple are disposed to throw out a great reyes of gills. 
the stem, immediately belo aaa the — If these are permi ne Scull 
grow, they will materially affect the swelling of the ff ruit, by tak. 
to a well-dressed gentlewoman, 
beauty to ae gs eS aoa only G é Bape of ing away a considerable portion of reese 3 it willbe beter, therefor 
ainter. ut these, as all violent opinions, ae their | to remove when young, taking care not to injur 
ntidote in the oan sense of the world ; and, like the ex- | by cutting ‘too ) close. Li pat - tired pees nts = soba a: they 
travagances 0 Turner the academician, only soem o show Vennaeo~The tite ponnyiane ery. weather “ee been specular 
he eccentricities of genius. e are glad to observe nage favourable to the selene the ote sphdee in forcing-houses 
. as led him Vines are less: diffic o keep clean nm many am ~ vena 
the good taste o f Sir Tho h “on baie Lauder a. éwn orto because the under surface of the leaves, where the insects Diana 
oo such ebullitions, when they occur, by h arbow, is more easily accessible to moisture, which is one of the 
e yoamoater alt ~~ zh -_ usua of applying it through a 
ous also when 
vation 
os ton and Price ne be regarded as the two best 
P 
iters we have on Landscape eo oamey. ete different with vapour occasionally by means of some contriy ed 
d both excellent. m will be found | ¢5 the heating apparatus. Sulphur laid upon th or pipes, 
the surest path to success in the man faacieie f scenery 5 n yam, ding gpecon gered By sctne, but caution ig 
re owe © in m action 
and fortunately everybody is now i ition to study - ary, the fruit will sabe be beginning to change colin and 
that mean, for the present publication is a fitting compa- ail ihe e light possible should b admit d to it, together witha 
nion to the cheap and ver ful 8vo editi i Repton’s | jiberal supply of air wen practica eit 
y i r or two ago by Mr. PeACH-HOUSE ruit is ripe, at is neckeetaay 
ie nh TU - ‘tie addition pe nume us judic ious | &xpose it freel y to ight and air, and to maintain a dry atmo phen 
€.sn0als S00, te for which purpose alittle fire-heat will still be requisite in very 
editorial rema arks intermix “on with, but distinguished from damp weather. . If mildew appears in any of the houses, mo 
ale , Sir Thomas Di Lander the fafec ted shoots and then dust them with sulphur. Thin the 
elf, on ‘the 
aste,’’ in whic n 
which the principles of taste depend are very ably and 
agreeably di 
The Heraldry of Fish (8vo, Van Voorst, 1842) i 
collection of heraldic devices a armorial bearings of all 
re in whic ome form a part of the cognisance. 
The work scarce} within bjects; we must 
not fail to those who wo tudy 
heraldry with some higher gt me that of tracing pe- 
digrees or emblazoning coats 0 
S 
5 
hat work called tubular ; this 6 i “ corrected in the 
—— of it, but stands unaltered in the work before 
Touch matter is sah inal we ot 
alee to say; if, however, we are to judge of its quality 
by the fo g specimen which has caught our eye, we 
certainly cannot express a favoura inion of it. 
P. 397 is an analytical table of the natural rs of Tha 
amifloral ens ; the characters therein assigned to the 
last five orders are as follows: Berberidegw, anthers wit 
alves ; Crucifere, placente in axis; Caryophyllee, Lina- 
cee, Rutacee: arietal. Now all anthers have 
yophyliee it is free central; in | Linacee and 
rary,in Car 
very bad 
Rutacee it is in the axis. This is 
Pereira’s nn nid ses has rapidly arrived at a 
second editio tany of Materia Medi most 
ina and is illus trated by numerous woo 
ischoff’s History of the Woollen and Worsted Ma- 
nufactures i is a well-arranged and very om coon atl, 
crete nt a ea earliest histo eri a = 
a sein sent day ; e legislative és ete 
have influenced i its sede: and of the causes which | ave 
dly, of merous races 
n 
‘corms an important ee : 
eep-farmers and woollen manufacture It is 
llastrated ol good figures of some of the most ‘adibitebed 
breeds of sheep. 
lanting, w 
us colour: m bin: 
plants according t to devsy respective heights and ‘seas 
, these a ——_ articularly attended to in plant- 
; this, ste which pa Pr uoas to have 
occupied "the ‘mind | ot o paraded, and nothin now re- 
main to ~ done but ‘he ee part o 
—KITCHEN rie 
Tn do ent, 
¥.—Stools from whieh ‘the. fruit have 
compost, 
sips might be in- 
creased in this way with great porn Chong ia tr of the 
fruit in me latest house, and let it advance slow wly, according to 
nature ; rs eS be p aaedtaae after stoning if required. 
bea are cleared a fruit, take them 
re) i ee < may be occupied by part of those 
om thesecondhouse. The exposed trees mu st not be neglected, 
however, but should be regularly watered and the foliage kept 
free from insects, as pols ong 
1G-HOUSE. —Tre: m which the first crop has been 
duce. Give 
leaves clean ‘gman whatin 
are in be state Sleded to: in last week’s Calendar, contig the 
treatment there recomme 
Stra oe RRIES.—The tr now produced will generally 
ogy rv than that which was forced earlier. Assist it in oni 
sm by and ve ie which —— readily be 
et The boxe’ eat 
men aod; “will Tals 0 be vege <A servicea' 
; 
it Seiad rue business may be. Sus 
only a few days would be productive of i injury, especially i 
dull weather should occur after the thinning of the 
shoots am aed ee ps ea to form. idge Cucumbers nice a 
e put o a little heat is found i = oe dung. Keep the 
ani me oe ves shadin, 
and covering with mats at night 
wg CAPsiIcuMs ae Eac- PLANTS intended to fruit in pots, 
The most forward atoes ne be pla nted out at the 
south h wall, wotecting them w: alt i get hold 
of the gr round. Also plant ws New reales ihe aes from pots. 
Dut.doo 
Many kinds of vegetable seeds co very ir larly this 
season ; bet wares that no Gdheleney of Gcnkeahenee occurs 
g crops. If any is found, resow immediately with 
Mag arid omy 
—Plant out Cape and Grange’s Early White from the 
of 1 aulifiow if the season is unfavourable to 
—A few rows of these, and likewise of 
e time, should be put out now to pro- 
the place o 
la 
LS SPROUTS. 
sown ad — sami 
arly su) 
GES, Plant irerly of the different sorts sown in spring; 
er one 
when if “trans canted they will give a successional oa 
LOWE ut out a good breadth of the spring-so 
f gro oar is oped bay alleys between the yore 
beds may be occupied by 
Ick-PLANT,— old. a akin , ice-covered leaves of this plant 
make it very wiitubie 4 for garnishing fruit during the hot weather 
of pe grcel a few plants should, therefore, be selected from the 
bed of ann and plante in tie ch soil, to make the leaves 
succulen 
car BEANS.—The dwarf kinds may be sown on an open 
TTUCE.—Transplant the first crop, if not already done 
on NnionS.—Hoe between the rows, and keep the young * plants 
clear of be eds, 
oan EAS he first transplanted crops, and those sown in autumn, 
now reel in fujl blossom, and the pods may ba forwarded a 
little owt. pinching off the tops of the plants, to stop their upward 
ith a hoe we — of the soil between 
rts Jed it becomes” 
on luxuri- 
—Loosen wi 
the rows of all that area 
oe inue to = 
ae on 
: : rae 
nailing. If the =~ weather has hardened t vy ground a 
pet Pe Bas aS of the alleys should be forked over 
ned. 
a a pe tg ee nin SHRUBBERY. 
vod get wth ; 
_Srove.—Many Or rehidaceous plant ts will 1 now be in full gro ht 
give them a liberal ly of water, and shade them uring jet 
sunshine. If this rae not attended to, the leaves yello pA 
ae ci Loo! Sand e which ar vos * gry 
= Shea nou u 
y mene them moist enough, P odorata aiid 
the tvery moist 
e, the 
me ait. 
this 
GRE AND ConsERVATORY.—If the weather is fin 
whole of the planes that it is pee to place in the op 
. Poe be removed from the house to their summer qi the | ‘main 
owever = ht, nici ece ne 
ght more enavenie nt, § for the re-ar- 
if m 
$ fin ished, when — nt can be spare: ed 
house In d 
> woo! 
> J of th 
fhe concen now by cuttings of the Borg shoots. of this D 
Pirs anp Frames.—Shift Chrysanthemums that require inal 
put 3 priced cutti later. If rooted slips of Cine 
ngs to acted ater ended to wap ter, fine plants 
By sav: 
Auriculas (se¢ Vol. I 
Her ing arrived 
to bear ome 
snd mn, will be 
in Ps reeat t ee upon the — ee aning en. of 
tion. Use despatch in planting ; let nothing 5 beh 
eet OMS ee Serpe 
for 
esuperabundant 
n bright sunshine, — 
foot of a 4 
cc 
first s owing ire will va in usefully in autumn, to supply — 
ec 4 
din the seed-beds two or three Weeks 4 
ee 
