RDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



[Feb, 24, 



> ■ 



■ 



the npper extreme >;> j£ ^ wat £ Ag * other 



ch a case, if only 01 ; }"™E!£1 ""LuT and^n^ome 



■ 



l.mrii-n! a- collecting pollen, and c 



^^ 





vl, 









A_3. 





r=— 



Fig. 3. 



■::>po°ed to bo placed in 





and about the same distauce from one anot 



row. The number of shoots on each i 



regulated during 









shoots will be sufficient. "\\ here this 





tised, a row of Raspberries in autura 







fig. ."■ ; the arched 





which bore fruit last year, and which 





to lb" bottom, and be replaced by the 



upright shoots of 



may soon be paid up together), 

 « n tol.l t'Siat tb 5 money was lent onh 

 nd. My 76 acres were looked upc 

 I reflected that I had no power 







draughts or cutting winds. A Young Gardener t Thorpe, 



Ice.— Your c inter contained 



some good papers on this subject, especially that by my 

 friend Mr. Beaton. There yet seems to be one thing 







'. 





urn aware that in some situations it is difficult to obtain 



it pure. From ponds muddled by the trampling of 





. or the common Potomogeto'i 



cannot be ex. 



pected, and consequently it will not keep ; besides, 



it is very objectionable to see pieces of such stuff 

 surrounding the breakfast butter at table. So much 



<>-■ ; ur'ty ; now for stowage. I altoge:! 









be the use of sented in fig. 2. 



I 'on'" * cannot mean "to ask 

 ^ *« ^V ^ , whether a clergyman can : 



. as we gather from the explanatory part of h: 



; ""■'■•' 



^ - N _ '"'- ' , ' '"• ' ^' ''■' 1- " - - t ("1, . ,- Land*. 1 



name. But as 



igh in this case as 

 ting, I can see no difficulty. Many parcels 



SLftSJ**"*- P«**P«W. Umt P we Ce arson's 



t think, find that SS , 



blunt cone and merely cover it over with old thi 

 milar i nterial. The plan was at first att< 

 merely to supplement the ice-house (one of t 

 school) and the result has been, 



Sicindhrs -Having soeu a r arag. 



>r the Protection of Trade, addressed to a J. Handfoid 

 f n r .' 1. ■■<■' i -i •■!•, I bfg to state that early this year 



re not asleep, and declined 



sending the goods until cash or a respectable reference 



, , Melson, and 



rpool, to whom according 



The goods were not supplied, and to a Iett< 



of the non success of the application to n« 



reference at Li en, and so tW 



tradesmen were to pursue the same polic] 

 soon be stopped, and obligations are due to you Mr 

 e species of robberies. If you like to gi™ 

 these facts you are welcome, but pe rM *~ 

 names had better not be mentioned. J. Lev 



Concreting Borders.- I beg to thank J™*.^ 



before the words " the bordi 

 : 

 these words, <- surface is <<|* 



mid be inserted. If your - 

 will do me the favour to read the passage wlt "T[ 

 : meaning is clear and COT- 

 j apply to all Vine borders, 

 wet ones. These exceptions I plainly «» 

 treated of in the succeeding paragraph *» 

 card to my own case, 

 ishut out of the border W« 

 above and below, I find that, unless of more thanor* 

 laterally from the damp ground beyond the edge oi J» 

 ] be amount of solar heat received byt^ 

 border is greater than your correspondent supp ^ 

 m observation, the concrete foims an 



: Sine ^ n *Lg 

 . tor a portion of the gravel, * 5***j£ 

 ■ a black surface, the best 



■ ' " .' :.: 



!ri(er - JS 



necessary, but witlinW 6 ^ 



