KK nntnENBRS' CHRONICLE. 



[March 31, 



^as 



cul ii down, unU 1. -ft- 







what is done to keep and mature winter Pears by th 

 London dealer 1 There is rne point in Mr. Errington' 

 paper about which I have doubt. He proposes to ripen 



by applying the heat 

 '— it has been long 



of a wane closet in his fruit-room ; but those who have 

 not that convenience may, I should think, easilv supply 

 the deficiency, by putting up a closet of the size of the 



Literary Piracy of Ftorimltttral Publications.— *Hi 

 vice has reached a point that is become intolerable 

 rtjmght to be more than censnrid ; it ought 1 



Brentmarch, from one Mr. Pace. Item, the a2 

 out of Essex ; Lethercott, or Russet Apell . t J* 



IVp, en ; K<-w Gonehn-, or the Croke ; Gla» Am-Tz 



Pearmeane ; Redd Stear ; Nemes Appell, or GrauW 



Bellabone ; Appell out of Dorsettaher ; Doouaei!! 



Pace's Pear. The Hinge's P £f en b -*± 



Trevelyan, Nettlecombe, Taunton. *** 



of species." While estimating highly thTvi£ 

 ° f m s DU the 'Xor couV'nV^rtok i"**"* * 



cular abstract form, more or less completely remind 



erence to Mr. Jordiri 



'"""' . r abnorin , : ipon tne morpnoiogn* 



relations of the different orgw. 

 aid take that as the true example of 



taTrS"5iil' I i' » species in the Phanerogamia, in which the seeds <dx 



ordinary mode td 



the gardener's opinion be 

 correct, the plan is perhaps worth notice. A. A. 



Protecting Wall Fruit Trees.— To ward off spring 

 frosts, my plan is to place boards on the top of the walls, 

 from the 1st of February to the Ut of May, allowing 



of the wall. One inch projection for every 10 inches in 

 he'ght of wall is the proper proportion. I placed a pro- 

 jeering roof of 3 inches ovtr a new wall 5 feet high, and 

 next morning I found that the upper half of the wall 

 was protected, while the lower half was injured by the 

 frost Side screens and blinds in front failed, when the 



perfectly and abanduBj 



1 produced in a generally healthy condition of the who. 



i irora such examples alone, where anydoik 



existed, should specific characters be drawn. In calm* 



tion, a most important test in doubtful cases, the plaott 



ought to be exposed to many different kind* of eoatihe, 



first produced it, while the varied conditions woild 

 afford the best means of judging of the relative constatj 

 of characters afforded by the different organs of thi plat 



.-.■■■.<• 



land. By Wm. Bridges. Bailliere. Pamphlet, 16 pp. 



Duodecimo, or the Scribbler's Progress, an Atttb- 



graphy. 12mo. Newby. 325 pp. 



« It is impossible that Ireland can go on in this wh. 

 Such are the words of every second man who qpwil ta 

 mouth upon the subject. The unanimity is delightful, 

 but, alas ! with this phrase it ends. One gwtlemu 

 would confer upon Lord Clarendon the authority ofu 



hope that at last nothing would remain °^^^. 

 a fourth would break up the whole surface of theta* 

 into small holdings, and introduce French monu- 

 ment; a fifth Buggests turning the bogs into ctoJtw, 

 and selling it to the Londoners for the purpose of p» 

 fication. Mr. Bridges suggests a national ^W- 

 which land-scrip bearing interesH^to be «J^JJ 



and public companies. The author of ^^Jjjji 

 home colonies'; and recent circumstances invert 

 "HispropiTbTLnd in Ireland an Agr^f 



and that this part of Sussex 



9 , 



:y.-In connection with the 



naa a number of J the Mowmg «tract from a notebook kept at this 



scale to allow of its answering JjJ^ ^ p* 

 may be self-supported ; a place of w*™ 1 **^ #& « 



ighbourhood, a 

 all others they i 



go te deE e ie°an object* 

 0t " e TaS'"rheri Sandhurst for our model, the*J 

 step is to g show that ™j£^^£** % 



gentlemanly, bnt, moreover exceeding^ en f 

 can only be effected by numbers ; and we *° ^ d 

 fore propose that the%stablishment shouWco 

 500 pupils-avery ^^^^d the fin** 



e has 499 comrades, may i 



