— 
— 
THE TERP EME SS CHRONICLE. 
605 
of ‘the 
en 
of this 
n—E. 
i 
Gardene ners and We eds. i consider ita part of the duty | 9 
ofan 
and to be ndings day by day, penne however trifling, 
of ac 
to his stock of knowledge. Amongst o 
eid information on “loubtful ents: the pages of the 
rdene ers Chronicle stand | pre- eminent ; t the” ope- 
which he gains 
e of vexation. 
=m usement may be to him also a sourc 
_ Some persons say you are not impartial, that you lean to 
_ the employer more than to th lo hilst 
= jou is conning over your pages, in a (too o “ew 
lis walks 
tion with regard toa ta 
— and a half ago, 
water, Tor the garden 
discontinue the heterlag oe 
hich we have had built, about 
for Holding 300 @ bogs heads of ra 
und I 
§ ever. 
t possible material for lining tanks. 
been recommended b 
more preci 
n cement appears the best raver 
of peerensiag the water dissolving lime.—E. Wha 
lood to 
= 
- 
of Cuttings to Foreign Parts. 
Transmissi I 
observe in a la ate N ber of the Chronicle, that several 
ed by plun 
wards oP unged in a solution of 
» perhaps, be n gets waligest 
I tp all interstices between the 
nveloped in 
nibbee cloth, —L. § otk 
texf probability ie Ticciring Planis in the Aut 
—Amongst the various impr ich have within 
the @5 Geser f the 
ngs statement will go a little way to 
lamed alone, if at all 
a 
he activi he men, and the interest they take 
in the appearance of it; but, owing to a variety of causes, it 
is seldom they care hing about its general appearance. 
Few, very ave a sufficiency of hands to 
with work in the bus 
nforeseen circumstances fre- 
r 
tness. 
, then, yk indastrious gar- 
and that 
ishing harmony between 
and their employers, by showing the former what 
is required, and the latter the difficulties with which the 
Garde sleworth. 
sieve, to preven 
m blistering, avid the comp if c coarse, 
ng a eta face to the floor. smaller par- 
separated by a finer 
to remain, they would 
The whole must - well 
s of the consistence 
st : be allowed to lie i ina heap for for a ‘week ; 
is 
= 
of wh 
and it will then be ready for use. If the ground is damp 
on which the floor is to be formed, it should have a coating 
er € 
to render 
level. —. 
hort as te former, sine, coro the gayest 
summer months, by far the greater oan of the higher 
ererege! who take an unbounded interest in flowers, and 
rdener must in a gre’ ure rely f 
period y nay disp splay o 
pe gages the delicate yet not less interesting flowers 
of the Hyacinth a be met 
crude ore ft sae hed 
oot so: bra would un- 
doubtedy give birth to Share hich fresh 
flower-huds, and these in th 
ous eats plants. ex- 
Aol 
other 
It can hardly be doubted that that the Ca- 
might be flowered at any period of the year, by 
e tem 0 
varyin 
require. Again, let us suppose that a 
bulb, was placed in an icehouse, or siideeek fe any situation 
where a regularly cool temperature wa ; 
not its perio r ed—and this without en- 
dangeri if 
altho 
of spring, and it would 
show how ody be rendered seihen vient to 
art in asd field of horticulture —Jnguirens. 
Growth of Plants in Charcoal. —Amongst your miscel- 
taneous sielie of last week, mention is made of some ex- 
e ther an ambiguous 
expresion. Miecheen a eke is nota cond eebae of tos 
t, like a when once heated, it parts with 
Pg "ca se focs ont, and ol Ne sen: be said t 
retain he at. I pA tg end that 
evonian, 
Mes ipure Water.—I aes) be much obliged for informa- | 
ts, is 
Gindinatbe of pth -Thte eat foe, Revie allic bodies | Apple 
op the tabers, and eee A shicsey the i ingress of 
whole m pts a- | vig 
Hyacinth, or other the 
those consi 
‘| ensis. 
Apple Tews and Rabbits. 
trees from 
| are ~~ conductors of heat, and supposing g that i iron 
filings wi ixed 
parti ae Mpeg the t of such a mixture would be 
of abstracting the heat not only from the soil, but also 
the water poured into it from time to time. It would, like- 
wise, by its coldness, paralyse (if I may use the expres- 
sion) the roots he plant wh he in contact 
with it. Thi i 
person to my one hand u piece of iron, and the 
pon wood: the at il "feel. cold by the abstraction of 
heat from the hand; er, being onductor of 
e duces n oT ion. C 1, if used in a 
finely-granulated state, and free from pusr, will, I have 
no - foun ch epee sand, for striking 
and other oses. his state water will freel 
When 
percolate na md but if a dust be left in it, the water 
wi om: rthy substances (sand, for 
of 
on that aoseniie I should 
v4 “pid 8 he fine of la oa ” 
a Learii,—Last autumn several small plants of 
this is Poeatifal climber were given me, and upon one or 
two of ound seed-vessels containing perfect seeds. 
-sized 
ous s§ not. 
at generally known? J, like Mr T Hicdlesiag turned o 
mall 1 pe deny plant against a south wall, hehe 
the latter e: 
is the most healthy and 
fo Rosehill Gar. 
The Ethi rum,— tc s, I find, generally 9 
great’ siiages ency in the summer tre: wre of the interesting 
ica (Richdrdia a situa, although it has s een 
cultiva ney in this country above a hundred years. re- 
nearly the same treatment as the Iris eileen 
ppe ce ke 
and repotting it, but not to excess, 
ei is best = roe g them cin the sa 
the win 
blooming i in a continued succession nti ciroughbue the 
winter. nd that, like all oh p and ee ee 
plants, wey pe pean ter a su he 
for a time i 
ing, “keeping oe only cightly mea 
be shaken out of the , the ro 
suror 
ema me flowe 
se Iris, is in the 
month, — reo i clogance anid pleasing fragrance are 
8, F. H. S., Leeds Bot. Garden, 
me effectual, method of propagating it. I put 
together a quantity of pa fermented dung, and place a 
frame upon it; I then er the surface of the hotbed 
ith ™ 
ay 
the cuttings will 
most ‘couvésiient 
a 
@ 
B 
o-such effect re be produced. 
: : 4 
a 
r. Beaton has n No. 34, 
of 1 hinpuagatliig ae will be arrived a 
anker in Fruit-trees.—It is at we peri iod of the year 
that canker generally makes its iy bao At it has 
not at an earlier period) amo Cc bers and 
pry a8 I beg s, whi 
sometimes thro 
case, the left ot the joint of the stem 
because they run headlong into the diseas 
|| carried on toa great extent, I am sorry t 
dered to be first-rate ra 
—I have lost many fine 
pre res isapiieated by reb bits, and 
a portion of the leaf. Such being ths - 
