49—1849.] 



THE GARDENERS' CHRONICLE. 







TOSLING'S ST. ALBAN'S GRAPE.— Planti 



-~ ESTABLISHED 1786. 



Tf ARLY PEAS— WILLIAM E. RENDLE 



ugh plate. The ma ■ 



"'""■'• ■'''■"-' :•..'•. -'"'.'. .';,'-'.■' v.'. \ . . '.' . 



you can see is the M 



■■■■■■■ 

 I their contract ; v. 



Danecroft Early Rivi 

 £3, Prince Albert, 

 jairbeard'a Cnampio 



vrrM. MAULE ani 



^ tl Th°ey V hTve U al8o Z ]a 



W.ihiSafeb 

 Skimnj's Purple-top 

 TeUowGlobTditto 





to offer the folli 





'nrple Sprouting 



P DENYER bega to inform 1 

 eesofthe finest pro* 





Mr. Haki,.,:v 

 longed to th 



and that the | 

 applied to such by together, 

 tm con- glass, thi 



Efit (Buvtstwig Chronicle. 



SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1849. 



so well known. Mr. Ham-ley also quoted other the nan 



-;une de- produce 



scription, ' rough-plate J inch thick,' f < r which, as when ti 



One would hav- -re. given This 



■ ■ 



:-'■'. 

 luinu v.l i* i . who are of the j 



capable of forming an opinion. We should also | nothing 



i 

 trusted 



-.;-. .- : - - •■ 



1 1:,,:-: 



han the material actually em- throug 

 . . 

 | duc'ed before tbl Tuesday end oi 



~ f.-or 11 skin, preferred other But 

 W K have for some time past occasionally pointed | eyes to his own. 

 out the value of Rough Plate Glass for Garden , builders and glass dealers, whose testimony is said anotln 

 T^;i,i;,„.. in conS enuence of its superiority to sheet to have been this : 



medium through which light is admitted j " Mr. V .-■!--. - .. ■ . 



' - - r..:-.--:,:: i - ■ ' ' ■■ ' ' 



no room to doubt that this is the best material yet I been considered by the trade rough plate, and, | rough 

 produced, and that it will in time supers ed 



heard of any. died. Mr. sheet 



'.:.'-- plant 



Poses. This being s 



; for the greater part of gardening 



-,L_h plate class.' Mr. B'lvi 

 ' stnn fin.;!, had - 



upon them a spurious 



award lately made by Tret a 



number of an excellent contemporary, the 



It appears that Messrs. L 

 facted to glaze the new county jail 



a practical ma 



as 'rough plate' glass— therefore sheet glass is 



s. Mr. C hater, finally, because in a certain to 



■' • i 



by rough plate, so that bn 

 1 by dealers interested in pals 



This has become the [ when 

 consequence of an extraordinary of St. 

 by Professor Hosking, the par- | blown 



• . ■ : ■ • 

 lent contemporary, the Bitilder. kinds 



CoBBETT, Of Not 



kinds « rough plate." M->sr<. 

 contract for glaz 



" called rough plate, i 



. • : 



'-■■ the < i.-t imiry sen.- 1 </ ' 



. • • 



thought that « e must say that ) 

 by encouragement to frar. 



«ays the Builder, " were glazi t, plate, and was therefore m> 



one fine morning, disco v. ■ moreover, that, 



■ ■ - ■ ,."■ ■ .' :^ ■' '■ : - ' : - ' \''" ' "' 



they looked for, namely, tJ 

 «ast glass recently introduced, with 

 Efface, through which roughness tb I 

 parency, although the glass remains | 



glass before it is ground and polished. The glass 

 *»% used was plain on the surface, generally trans- 







■.■,f..>-s,,r }>,■ 



