640 



THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. 



On the 29th September will be published, in handsome Folio, price 6s., Part VII. of 



THE 



OF 



GREAT 



BRITAIN 



9 



NATURE-PRINTED (life size). 



r ■■ -■ - -- — - i . 



Parts I. to "VI. are always on sale. 

 BRADBURY & EVANS, 11, BOUVERIE STREET. 



On the 29th of September will be published, price 2s., 



Part XXXI. of 



THE ENGLISH CYCLOPAEDIA, extending the 

 Natural History Division from Scincoid.e to Ski> r; and 

 the Geographical Division from Sunda Islands to Tiiian- 

 Shax-Nanlu, including among numerous others articles on 

 Surat, Susa, Sweden, Switzerland, Sydney, Syracuse, Syria, 

 Syrtes, Tabriz, Taiwan, Taman, Tambow, Tangut, Tarakai, 

 Taranto, Tarsus, Taurica Chersonesus, Taurida, Terneswar, 

 Tenasserim, Tennessee, Texas, Thapsacus, Thebes, Thesprotia, 

 Thessalonica, Thessaly, &c. &c. 



Br adbury & Evans. 11, Bouverie Street, Fleet Street. 



Lately Published, 



THE ELEMENTS OF BOTANY, Structural 

 and Physiological. With a Glossary of Technical Terms, 

 and numerous Illustrations. 12s. cloth. 



This completes the series of Elementary Botanical Works 

 by Professor Lindley, of which u School Botany," and " The 

 Vegetable Kingdom," form the other parts. 



The first two Parts of The Elements op Botany, comprising 

 Structural and Physiological Botany, and a Glossary of Tech- 

 nical Terms, are published in one octavo volume, price 125. 



These three parts form a complete manual of Botany for 

 Medical and other Students who hare made themselves 

 acquainted with the author's " School Botany." 



N.B. The Glossary may be had separately, price 5s. 



Bradbury & Evans, 11, Bouverie Street. 



MORTON'S NEW FARMER'S ALMANAC. 

 Early in November will be Published, 



ANEW FARMER'S ALMANAC. Price U. By 

 John C. Morton, Editor of the "Agricultural Gazette," the 

 " Cyclopedia of Agriculture," &c. 

 Along with the usual contents of an Almanac, it will include :— 



1. Monthly directions for the operations of the Farm and Garden. 



2. Short notices of the past year's Agricultural novelties and 

 progress. 3. Such an Index to current Agricultural Literature 

 as will direct the student to sources of information on the prin- 

 cipal Agricultural topics. 4. A list of the more important of 

 those well-established facts in Farm experience, which may serve 

 as trustworthy data in Agricultural Estimates and Calculations. 

 5. Short references to the treatment proper under the more 

 common Diseases to which Farm Stock are liable. 6. A series of 

 Instructions and Receipts in many particulars of Household, 

 Garden, Field, and Dairy Management. 7. A guide to the more 

 important of our Fairs and Markets, with information as to 

 times and places where the ditferent kinds and breeds of Stock 

 may be best obtained. 8. An index to the Meetings, Office- 

 bearers, and' objects of our principal Agricultural Societies and 

 Farmers' Clubs. 



The object throughout will be, by good arrangement and close 

 packing, to furnish as much Agricultural information of prac- 

 tical usefulness as can be issued by the printer and the publisher 

 for Is. 



London : Blackie & Son, Warwick Square ; and Glasgow and 

 Edinburgh. 



Now ready, 



THE FERNS OF GREAT BRITAIN: Illustrated 

 by John E. Sowerby. The Descriptions, Synonyms, &c, 

 hy Charles Johnson, Esq. In One Vol. cloth boards, containing 

 49 Plates, full coloured, 275.; partly coloured, 145. 



John E. Sowerby, 3 , Mead Place , L ambeth. 



Shortly will be ready, Part I., of 



rpHE FERN ALLIES; A Supplement to "The 



JL Ferns of Great Britain." Illustrated by John E. Sowerby, 

 Descriptions by C. Johnson, Esq. To be completed in about 

 Six Parts. Full coloured at3s., partly coloured at Is. Gd. per Part. 

 Subscribers are requested to send in their names to the Pub- 

 lisher as early as possible, in order that a sufficient supply may 

 be prepared. 



John E. Sowerby, 3, M e ad Place, Lambeth. 



Just Published, 



ARTHUR HENDERSON and CO'S CATALOGUE. 

 No. I., containing Orchidea?, Exotic, Greenhouse, and 

 Hardy Ferns, Select Stove Plants, including Aquatic, Variegated- 

 leaved Plants, and Plants suitable for suspending in the Stove 

 and Orchidese House, Greenhouse Plants, Indian Azaleas, 

 Camellias, Ericas, Herbaceous and Alpine Plants, which may be 

 had on application to them at Pine-apple Place, Edgware Road. 



Price 55. 6d. cloth, 

 SECOND EDITION, REVISED AND ENLARGED, 



ORNAMENTAL AND DOMESTIC POULTRY ; 



Their History and Management. 



By the Rev. EDMUND SAUL DIXON, M.A., 



Rector of Intwood with Keswick. 



J. Matthews, 5, Upper Wellington Street. Covent Garden. 



KJ 



Y. 



D 



NEW PART OF COPLAND'S DICTIONARY. 

 This day is published, in 8vo, price 4*. 6d., Part XVII. of 



R. COPLAND'S MEDICAL DICTIONARY. 



London : Longman, Browx, Green, & Longmans. 



In post 8vo, sewed, price One Shilling, 



*T<HE CURABILITY OF CONSUMPTION ; being 



, -*■ a Series of Papers, presenting the most prominent and im- 

 portant practical points in the Treatment of the Disease. By 

 F. H. Ramadge, M.D., Fellow of the College of Physicians, late 

 Senior Physician to the Royal Infirmary for Diseases of the 

 Chest, &c. AJso? by 0]ft same Anthol% price 10 ^ edf 



A TREATISE vW ASTHMA and DISEASES of the HEART. 



London: Longman, Brown, Green, & Longmans. 



NEW AND ENLARGED EDITION OF DR LINDLEY'S 



THEORY OF HORTICULTURE. 



Just Published, in 8vo, with 98 Woodcuts, price 21s. cloth, 



'pHE THEORY and PRACTICE of HORTICUL- 



•*■ TURK; or, an Attempt to explain the chief Operations of 

 Gardening upon Physiological Grounds: being the Second 

 Edition of the "Theory of Horticulture," much enlarged. By 

 John Lindley, Ph.D., F.R.S., Corresponding Member of the 

 Institute, Vice-Secretary of the Horticultural Society, Professor 

 of Botany in University College, London, &c. 



" The First Edition of this valuable work was issued in 1840, 

 since which time it has had an extensive circulation, and has 

 been translated into the German, Dutch, and even Russian lan- 

 guages. Being more particularly restricted to principles, how- 

 ever, the author at length resolved to render the work more 

 generally interesting and useful by a more frequent reference to 

 practical operations. He has thus greatly extended the matter, 

 by supporting the physiological doctrines with an appeal to facts 

 familiar to cultivators, or which ought to be; and the result is a 

 still more interesting and popular compendium of the principles 

 and practice, or the science and art, of horticulture."— Builder. 



"This is a Second Edition of the " Theory of Horticulture," 

 with the addition of a large quantity of practical matter, intro- 

 duced to show how entirely scientific principles and good cultiva- 

 tion correspond. The volume contains about four times as much 

 matter a* the first edition .... Although very large additions 

 are made to every chapter, while many passages in the first 

 edition have been wholly struck out, it may be proper to say that Dahi 

 the greatest changes are those which relate to vitalitv, climate, 

 domestication, ventilation, propagation, pruning, resting, and 

 sous and manures; such being the subjects in which practical 

 2Sh *!$ tt] ° St interested - The whole work has, indeed, assumed 

 Srl M t0 make !t evident that the great object of the 

 w ZH v • u' not t0 P r °d"ce a work suited to men of scienc 

 2nd *™w v h e *I ery wel1 inform€d gardener may under imi 

 of V£tr \htl • e ^S 16 conclude s w ith a very copious index 

 «„k?J^ '♦ ? I s ?2 difl teult 7 la ascertaining where an 

 subject xs treated oV'-GardmurJ Chronicle. 



copious 



y given 



TvmnAntr^. By the same Author, 



INTRODUCTION TO BOTANY. 



X™ v lu. S" ifll 6 PlMeB ' *»■»£ Wood En. iTtaJ 



* 



he 



It has been the Author's wish to brin~ everv subiect that 

 .has i introduced down, as nearly as &OT8KJS! 

 h.ch it is found a he present day. In doing so, he has added 

 so very considerable a quantity of new matter especially 

 in what rentes to Vegetable Anatomy and PhrStolo^ that 



Lew work mR7 consid€ «^ in thc4 respects, a 



London : Longman, Brown, Green, & Longmans, 



Third Edition, considerably enlarged, price 5s. 6d. 



URAL CHEMISTR 



By Edward Solly, F.R.S., F.L.S., F.G.S., 



Honorary Member of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, 

 Professor of Chemistry to the Horticultural Society of London, 

 Lecturer on Chemistry in the Hon E. I. Co.'s Military Seminary 

 at Addiscombe, &c, &c. 



_J. M atthews, 5, Upper Wellington Street, Covent Garden. 



Price 3d. each, or 5s. for 25 copies for distribution among Cottage 

 Tenantry, delivered anywhere in London, on a Post-office order 

 being sent to the Publisher, James Matthews, at the office of 

 the Gardeners' Chronicle. 



In consequence of the new postal arrangements, parties in the 

 country who desire it can have two copies sent by post for 

 one stamp, five for two stamps, or eleven for four, in addition 

 to the cost of the numbers. 



qPHE COTTAGER'S CALENDAR OF GARDEN 



± OPERATIONS. 



By Sir Joseph Paxton, M.P. 

 Reprinted from the Gardeners' Chronicle: above 98,000 

 have already been sold. 



CONTENTS. 



Gilias 



Gooseberries 



Grafting 

 Green-fly 

 I leartsease 

 Herbs 



Herbaceous Peren- 

 nials 

 Heliotrope 



Hollyhocks 



Honeysuckle 



Horse-radish 



Hyacinths 



Hydrangeas 



Hyssop 



Indian Cress 



Iris 



Kidney Beana 



Lavender 



Layering 



Leeks 



Lepto siphon s 



Lettuce 



Lobelias 



London Pride 



Lychnis, double 



Marigold 



Marjoram 



Manures 



Marvel of Peru 



Mesembryanthe- 



mums 

 Mignonette 

 Mint 



Mustard 

 Narcissus 

 Nemophilas 

 Oenothera bifrons 

 Onions 



Peonies 



Parsnip 



Parsley 

 Peaches 

 Pea-haulm 



Pears 



Peas 



Pelargoniums 



Perennials 



Persian Iris 



Petunias 



Phlox 



Pigs 



Pinks 



Planting 



Post-office orders to be made payable to James Matthews. 

 5, Upper Wellin n Street, Coven t Garden, London. 



OIM NERVOUSNESS, DEBILITY, AND EXHAUSTION?" 



Just published, new and cheapcrEcHtion, price 1$., or Is. Id. by post 



r riIE SCIENCE OF LIFE; Or How to Live and 



-1 What to Live For, with ample rules for Diet, Reginen, 

 and Beit-Management, together with instructions for curin 

 health, longevity, and that sterling happini only sttainabl 

 through the judicious observance of a well regulated com of 

 life. Bf A Physician. 



London : Sherwood & Co., 23, Paternoster Row; Hann'AY,G3, 

 Oxford Street: Manx, 39, Cornhili; Horne, 19, Leicester Square ; 

 and all Booksellers. 



African Lilies 



Agapanthus 



Anemones 



Annuals 



Apples 



Apricot 



Auriculas 



Beans 



Beet 



Biennials 

 Black Fly 



Books for Cottagers 



Borage 



Borecole 



Box Edgings 



Broccoli 



Brussels Sprouts 



Budding 



Bulbs 



Cabbage 



Cactus 



Calceolarias 



Californian Annuals 



Campanulas 



Carnations 



Carrots 



Cauliflowers 



Celery 



Cherries 



China Asters 



China Roses 



Chrysanthemums, 



Chinese 

 Chives 

 Clarkias 

 Clematis 

 Collinsias 

 • olewort 

 Cress 

 Creepers 



Crocus j 



Crown Imperials j 

 Cucumbers i 



Cultivation of flowers 



in windows 



Daisies j 



Dog's-tooth Violets 

 Exhibitions, prepar- 

 ing articles for 

 Ferns, as protection 

 Fruit 

 fuchsias 

 Gentianella 



| Plums 

 Polyanthus 

 Potatoes 

 Pruning 

 Privet 



Propagation by cut- 

 tings 



Pyracantha 



Radishes 



Ranunculus 



Raspberries 



Rhubarb 



Rockets 



Roses 



Rue 



Rustic Vases 



Sage 



Salvias 



Savoys 



Saxifrage 



Scarlet Runner 



Beans 

 Seeds 



Sea Daisy or Thrift 



Seakale 



Select Flowers 



Select Vegetables 



and Fruit 

 Snails and Slugs 

 Snowdrops 

 Spinach 



pruce Fir 



Spur Pruning 

 -tocks 



Strawberries 



Summer Savory 



Sweet William 



Thorn Hedges 



Thyme 



Tigridia Pavonia 

 Transplanting 

 Tree Lifting 

 Tulips 



Turnips 



Vegetable Cookery 

 Venus's Looking- 



Glass 

 Verbenas 

 Vines 



Virginian Stocks 

 Wallflowers 

 Willows 

 Zinnias 



A 



N 



[Sept. 22, 1855. 



INTRODUCTION TO THE 



JURISPRUDENCE. 



STUDY OF 



m»»£?£!L£ TRANSLATION OF THE GENERAL P\KT OF 



TIIIBAUT'S SYSTEM DES PANDEKTEN RECHT* 

 ■o « . *™ . ^ WITH *<*ra and illustrations a 



By NATHANIEL LINDLEY, of the Middle Temple P«„ 



Barrister-at-Law. P ' * h( ^ 



William Maxwell, 32, Bell Yard, LincolSTlnirLaV Ro7V 

 seller and Publisher; Hodges & Smith, Grafton Street, Dublin 



TO NURSERYMEN AND GARDENERS 



T3EIGATE SILVER SAND, 12s. per ton,' l, M 



xxrt F er ^ ls . he1 ' or 165 ' P er t0T1 > delivered to the Londor 

 Wharfs or Railways, or within a circuit of five miles. Sacks <>« 

 each. Kentish and other Peats and Loam of excellent quality 



Kennard Brothers, Swan Place, Old Kent Road 



OW TO KILL RATS, MICE, AND MOLESBY 



HUNDREDS.— A method will be forwarded with iastrn, 

 tions for 30 postage stamps, which will destroy the above vermin 

 quickly and without trouble. 1000 Acres may be clears f™ " 

 few shillings.— Gilbert Dyson, Hon, Rochester. 



cleared for a 



GEORGE P. TYE'S Registered HYACINTH 

 BOTTLES and FLOWER SUPPORTS are an age befom 

 all others for quality and utility. May be had everywhere 

 retail and wholesale in great variety, from G. P. Tye, 107 Great 

 Charles Street, Birmingham. All are carefully selected and 

 marked G. P. Tyb on the botto m of ea ch article. 



THE CRYSTAL PALACE FLOWER BASKETS 

 and HANGING GARDENS, made to the original 

 Sydenham Pattern, and a variety of other new and elegant 

 designs for the Conservatory, Verandah, Drawing Room 

 Boudoirs, &c, by W. Richards, Imperial Wire Works 370' 



Oxford Street, London, nearly opposite the Princess's Theatre * 

 and at the Crystal Palace. ' 



A large stock on view from 35. 6d. upwards. Flower Stands 

 rainers, Game and Garden Fencing, and Wire Work of every 



description. Conservatories and Aviaries fitted up in superior 



style. Window Blinds of all sorts. 



370, Oxford Street; and Garden Entrance, Crystal Palace 

 Syden ham. r 



GALVANISED WIRE NETTING for Game and 

 Poultry, Id. per square foot; Galvanised Wire Trellis for 



Work and Hurdle Manufactory, 44, Skinner Street, Snow Hill 

 London. I llustra ted Catalogues forwarded Post-free. 



POULTRY, RABBIT, SHEEP &CAT FENCING, 

 HARE or RABBIT NETS, on CORDS, for Covert Shoot- 

 ing, 12 mesh over, 4 feet wide, 2d. per yard; 18 mesh over, 6 feet 

 wide, 3d. per yard ; 24 mesh over, 8 feet, 4c?. per yard ; each edge 

 corded, \d. per yard extra. Extra stout do., 18 mesh wide, 4d. 

 per yard, suitable for Poultry Fencing. Square mesh Cricketiag 

 Net, fix its full width and length, made of stout cord, 3d. to Ad. 

 per square yard ; this is the best article made for Fencing against 

 Fowls, Cats, &c, at W. Cullingford's, 1, Edmund Terrace, 

 Ball's Pond K oad T near Kingsland Gate, Lond on. 



NETTING for SHEEP-FOLDS, made ofCOCOA- 

 NUT FIBRE, a material known to possess the most extra- 

 ordinary durability when exposed to the alternations of weather. 

 It will wear out several sets of tarred hemp netting, and is so 

 light that a herdsman may with ease cany 200 yards of it. 

 3i and 7-inch mesh, 6d. per yard. Sold in Nets of 50 and 100 

 yards long, 48 inches high, by the Manufacturer, W. Cullikg- 

 fobp, 1, Edmund Terrace, Ball's Pond Road, near Kingsland Gate. 



BIRD NETS, BAT-FOLDING NETS, fob JBIRD 

 CATCHING, 105. each; extra large, 155.; Clap Nets for 

 Bird Catching, 12 yards long, 5 feet deep, 10s.; with staffs, pull 

 line, and stop cord, 1/. 10s. Lark Nets, made square mesh, any 

 size required, 3d. per square yard. A Partridge Trammel, 30 

 yards long, 5 yards wide, made square mesh, 11. lis., or any less 

 size 2d. per square yard. — W. Cullin t oford, 1, Edmund Terrace, 

 Ball's Po nd Road, near K in gsland Gate, London. 



pHEAP WIRE GAME & POULTRY NETTING^ 



Plain. Galvanised. 



3d. to 4d. per yard ... 6d. per yard. 



6d. per yard ... 9d. „ 



J t. ., ... is. «i 



n 



■ • 



... 



• • • 



Wide. Mesh. 



24 inches by 2 inches 



36 „ 2 



48 „ 2 



Sparrow Proof Netting, Galvanised, 3d. per square foot, roade 

 to any size. This article is shown at the Sydenham Exhibition, 

 where it is much admired.— W. Cullingford, 1, Edmund Ter- 

 race, Ball's Pond Road, near the Gat e, Kingsland. , 



GARDEN NETS, FISHING NETS, SHEEP 

 NETS, and RABBIT NETS (made by hand, as machine- 

 made knots slip) supplied at very low terms. Samples 3ent free. 

 — W. Cullingford, 1, Edmund Terrace, Ball's Pond Road r 

 Kingsland, near the Gate. Six Tents to Mil cheap. 



"FIRE- 



_ and vapour- 

 isii/$), with all the improvements, under their Quadruple Patents 

 of 2 )-51-54 and 1855, including their Gunpowder Proof Solid 

 Lock and Door (without which no Safe is secure), the strongest, 



BEST, and CHEAPEST SAFEGUARDS EXTANT. 



Milner s Phoenix (212°) Safe Works, Liverpool, the most com- 

 plete and extensive in the world. Show Rooms, 6 and -S, Lord 

 Street, Liverpool. London Dep6t, 47a, Moorgate Street, City. 



Circulars fr< by post. 



010° MILNBR'S HOLDFAST AMD 



&.X& RESISTING SAFES (non-conducting ar 



OIL 



DR. DE JONGH'S 



T IGHT BROWN COD LIVER 



1-J Prescribed with complete confidence by the Faculty for its 

 purity, and superior, immediate, and regular efficacy. 



It is entirely free from nauseous flavour, and being invariably 

 and carefully submitted to chemical analysis — and only supplied 



IN SEALED BOTTLES TO PRECLUDE SUBSEQUENT ADMIXTURE OR 



adulteration— this Oil possesses a guarantee of genuineness 



and purity offered by no other Oil in the market. 



Testimonial from* ARTHUR H. HASSALL, M.D., F.L.S.; 



M.R.C.P., Chief Analyst of the Sanitary Commission of the 



Lancet, Author of u Food and its Adulterations," &c. &c. &c- 



"I have more than once, at different times, subjected your 

 Light Brown Oil to chemical analysis— and this unknown to 

 yourself-— and I have always found it to be free from all imparity 

 and rich in the constituents of bile. So great is ray confidence 

 n the article, that I usually prescribe it in preference to any 

 other, in order to make sure of obtaining the remedy in itspures* 

 and best condition.*' 



Sold only in bottles, capsuled and labelled with Dr. De Jga?iL 

 Signature, without which none are genuine, by ANSA*, 

 HARFORD, & CO., 77, STRAND, London, Dr. De Jongh^ 

 sole Consignees ; and by most respectable Chemists in town ana 



rnnnt vv 



Half-pints (in oz.), 2s. 6d.; Pints (20 oz.) f is. 9d.; Quarts 

 (40oz.) f 95.; IMPERIAL MEASURE. 



Printed 



inted by William Bradbury, of No. 13, Upper Wobnni *"]**; ."J- 

 Pr.dbh.ick M.lt.ktt Evil**, of No. 20, Queen's Bond, W«t, both. in 

 The Pnrmh of St. Panrr»R,and in the County or Middlesex, Frtnte.-, -• 

 their Office in Lornbnr«l Street, in the Precinct of WhitKriar*, m ™ ^JJo 

 of London; «nd published by their at the Office, No. 5. Upper Welling"" 

 Street, In the Parish of St. Paul's. Covent Garden, in the said Lou ° l £ 

 where- all Adve semen t« and Communications are to be Am»Bl«»*n 



the EDrtoB.— Saturday, September -2, 1S55. 



