THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 



T ECTUK. 



I v, iiC u iei me man wno wiiruliy and needless 



•'- - L ' 

 y is tv;dly •• into tun te,'' 01 dimply mad ? 



: 



■ 

 poets)— 



Th,Vs 





^>'SS; 



M0«EA WATERER'S EXHIBITION OF 



W^inu'jtoa principal contributor ^"ti 



•■■■•■ •■'■■'■ 

 tef Ktftbe Woking Station, South Western Railway. The 



:c of Mori- ;v e observe m a Belgian newspaper that, in a cir- 



h has been lately addressed by 



Interior to governors of provinces 



recommended that " when the 



amenSiM fl m . 1S *? 8*°**' that is to say, shoi U ifiei 



mg, the stems should be cut down to the 

 ground carefully, so as not to disturb the tubers, 

 itS metres deep 

 from contact with 



roots, such as the Tara, Taniers C 

 Potato, in the cold, sunless fields c 

 Ire and. If the <■!/ 

 such plants might i 

 ainly can in son,'. 



V 



£pXZ£l by K 



■ -COLOURED rhodod: 





r. This layer to rem 

 A M. Tombelle-Lom: 

 that, by adopting this 



year as good as they \ 



There are 



■ 

 cation of its suiting a parti. . 



R» fm tetreqr ©firoimlt 



SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1849. 



*n»Ulir, _ 13 I Lkerary Fand! \VY\\\\'.Y. , .'.\'.V.'.'X r.'».' 



' : reports are rife of its having 

 in the Irish midland counties 



doubt-" of it- visit having 



- if they too were about to be- 



^S .!* **tiito m Ham P 8hire > the y are aheady 



ever. So many sets have 



acea near London, that great 

 K? 3 ^tte r in™ ♦,? fields 5 and > as > will be 

 ?«5° WdlTS 6 ? 01 ™". the same fact 

 i. W tbe liSJ?^ and elsewhere. In 



bave found a number of young 



■fift** But 2 eft in a box of di y 



It ^^ for? What ^ s ™habrood of 



aid to suit a plant when 



owers, fruit, and peculiar 

 jrfect state of which its 



lulled, climate cannot I 



*»ut. They are entirely fulfilled in the situate 



vhere plants were originally placed by the Creator 



md they will be equally fulfilled elsewhere unde 



■nd atmospherical influences, especially the lattei, 

 re the same; but not otherwise. The influences 

 vhich are most important consist of solar light having 



:-■ li'-driil" 



t part of the plan! .- but as 



tri itm- 'IV. 



Tobacco may be bought 

 per lb., out of which sui 

 ment for duty. 



ice of sufficient data, the physiologist 



i certainty what the result of cultivat- 



FRUIT TREE BORDERS. 



>dman» (see p. 230), is 



f r *e and unw, 

 % <7 0ll fortunaf » England 



England for sympathy 



and it is i m 



ch ed state of 



r, of air having a certain weight, and of mois- 

 resent in the atmosphere at c ■ 

 ilar amount. Places in wild 

 tmospheric pressure, and atmospheric mois- 



concerned, and in proportion 



o be equally suitable for the growth of a given 

 Instead of dwelling on these facts, which 

 are perfectly understood- by vegetable physiologists, 

 let us further explain our meaning by a few examples. 

 Rhubarb grows in the most healthy manner in 

 England ; and therefore our climate is said to suit 

 it. And so it does if the object is merely to procure 

 leaves, flowers, and fruit. But the real value of 

 Rhubarb consists in the presence of certain secre- 

 which render it a potent medicine. In the 

 plains of Siberia and Chinese Tartary, where the 



a ours, it is able 



retions. But in England it 



forms them so feebly and imperfectly that the roots 



' ve little medical value. The climate of England 



therefore unsuited to the growth of Khubarb, 



cept for the service of the cook. 



In like manner the Hemp plant thrives perfectly 



in England, producing seeds in abundance ; and 



therefore the climate is said to be suited to it. And, 



as the object for which Hemp is cultivated with us 



both which are formed abundantly, the state- 

 may be acquiesced in — so far as v 

 purpose to serve in growing it. But - 

 say that the climate of England is i1 

 Hemp-growing, if we desired to procure those other 

 Iter countries. 

 Under the dry, warm, sunny skies of the East, Hemp 

 forms a powerful, peculiar resinous matt proceeding is to fill i 



universal employment as an agreeable stimulating 



such effects can be obta ,"• uc "^ 



i Hemp. Therefore th. '^iti»d«wdt 



England cannot be said to be, upon the whole, such ?"\ ,n * he P^P^ion of one 

 as that plant requires. ' I tea loads of leave8 ' and * i] 



To make the 



i border desc: 



; Vinery. The soil of the outside border is 

 ipon chequered brick arches, havi - :, 



!e amount of labour ; that the quantity of manure 

 and, lastly, that the heat is sufficient and under perfect 





forwarded the article referred to by *' Dodman," 

 ve had another year's experience of forcing Vin« 



rly forcing, the result is so satisfactory as to give m 



properly shaken 



■,,., ... . ~s 





meaning people who - 



be<J -'-" $*k™l.* A ™™* with the j ChUlle [Jarollj( lv ;-; 1 



wring, when a portion of the decayed leaves is 





