THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE AND AGRICULTURAL GAZETTE. án э tum 
who seek to i improre ‚ their condition by | days, the amo ount of rain for that month bein nearly | b y generally considered un 
five — « - uble the usual quantity ; in Ju the | be Ач Hr rin tely, the Medie к гау 
; August and September the | Supplement containing 66 pag T sii (e 
gin much above the average. ns short, СИМИ 
«d iim i typified to be exceedingly dry proved Tho Irrationale of S. 
eontrary to be excessively wet; whilst (һе! This P of Speech, mM 
revious season, typified by 6 equinoctial week to е | from M d 5 pipar on Stammeri 
f ‚4°. т а agazine, 
390 
poorer c classes 
going fo forth in | search of new homes,’ 
be visite y fine. Let bis account of v pec 
ome serve D Thog quays of Montreal g €: 
are of imperial bea 
city in Europe. f iot 
stone from the Lach hine Canal xem th т river- ios very wet, pro ved to x fo И 4 7 
before the city, leavin a bem ne broad mall or esplanade | successive seasons were in fact diametrically Rua eret fue ! 
eal i the houses. The S pubis what they should have been according to "the we а: cipe gi Te obse - era with whieh 
am built " solid Ме; in which a tec which the author of the оваа has laid down Thi ais | өю мшш es that child 
predomina! are of very merit. | y € n — to „speak more do ubtfully than odd on зај. xu dong baf akin 
ecd rmn адат, banks, markets, hospitale Afi я z ore 3- their, little Ъ in, 
wn. all are vov 4 of a a lly perusi - e 
present a very di hether the summer ст prove goo : ; < i 
that which was poem y the. dier Trew ee different. || ча ner Ex explanation “7 "OR 
om rene Montreal of 1812,” and ltu: By known somethin ч of ind mistaki not; ts he has himn 
e question - rere) Canada appears for the | 7e Olrysanthemum : its, History and Cu ith tl d paso misery of sta mmering, 
Bi de Manádeé; and ip]. John alter, .R.H.S, with ем траене with thankful heart he tells tho world that this чі 
: and engravings on wood. London: Groombr idge & eror пау be cured. this рш 
presen 
vien d күт а үнү that such a magnificent country 
— to England. After all, —— i|. Sons, 1865. 8vo, pp. that Ф ye £e observant und 
Da y а question of time; sooner or later, When Mr. Salter discourses on Chrysanthemums, 5 himself in earnest to try 
5 oll; drop off and assum eir inde x pem p speaks, No one we believe esr ье | ure A [^em pm d, and met with во 
pendence; but, as Mr. Russell urges, vint з à | dierent |f ound more thoroughly competent to give the " com- T that he maie that arb tbe stud - 
+з 
2 
in pit "d introduction into England in 1764 up to yen] g n were hi 
denien — с pem 4 iei. g^ het m sent date," whieh i s what is here promised, for unch fri rien nds thr rough life. The latter writes, «| 
become alienated fron m the parent country, and ripe for w ias been with pos hor an almost lifeJong study; witnessed Mr. Hunt's pgs 
an alliance with its rivals, no one with arien sym pathies about for the aiaee of stam mering. It is fonnded on corres 
hysiological principles, is simple, efficaciouz, and m. 
The Summer of 1865 : founded on the Vernal Equinos, both of instruction and of interest, We content our- attended by po or inconvenience, &e,” Such testimony 
With Observations on the Summers of England. By selves ws stating p Mr. Salter’ s is a good bo ok ; is conelus 
Thomas D: e d London: Rogerson & Tuxford, Uere h the further remark, that on Mr. Hunt, by dint of good sense, patience, andper 
idus там кийн to the fall development of | severance, made man discoveries, — ermined that 
Since ce 1860, е: du thor has annually give na a foreoust hia fases the ce tender pon urn to his yt 
of the prumers fou AND са of treatise with confiden d n to a few his- | thorough surgeon's education, which the father neve 
respective vernal са Ж € state of the мш torical seraps fro p its p : Dr. James Hunt has made the cure of stammering 
from the 18th to фе 25th of March, He bas laid down | То begin at the beginning + in 1764 a plant of the | the ergon of his life 
a gener: in his бойла qued s, that "m small yellow Chrysanthemum was growing in the 
Жашау equinox u Ча Ъу ап ordinary summer, рођен Seata at Chelsea In 1789, M. Blan- Booxs REGE!Y&D.— The 
and predicts it; and an extraordinary equinox predicts, of 5, 6, 7, and 8, edited by T. Rap Jones, F. e 
y ne | we rpl e—reachin, ng France!alive. To him ,| Henry Woodward, F.G.S., — original articles 
itin панну cuf deri is no t likely," he says, “that ma ny | reos belongs the honour of бана Ше Ai subjects of geological interest, reports and а 
accustomed observers Meus consider the vernal equi- it cheese] to Europe; in 1790 this tard м | of societies, and reviews of books, That of Mr. Marsh's 
gh, to b шал y to Eagland ; ; in 1795 it med at | book, ealled “ Man and Nature," treats of the inevitable 
usual for the time. "A may be some grounds for Mr. Cales Js nursery, Аё at —— e was pum result. of destroying forests i in Canada, the draining of 
Jos Бгд ^ Hm imply an | figure etween 1798 р. 
valled about the 1808 e А и were ловы * in 1820 twelve by planting. Mr. Hunt's “ Mineral Statisties of Great 
ame period 1 last year, thus implying for this year | distinct varieties were known in England ; and in 1826 | Britain” gives the consumption of coal for household 
he same probable result as for t he last, viz, eia a y 2 і igwick. this | Purposes, uf. on w exports, 
maturi me Sek varieti re all imported, but in 1830 seed | Valued altogether at more than millions sterling. 
of is bound to conclude, if there is a ved in the i of rie еше and а new race of | Some papers relating to че thermal springs of Bil, 
irati in tho; le ava referred to. But he goes on РА arieties sprang up,- ecame numerous, То | ®п@ read there last year, are noticed. Reviews of Mr, 
say, “ this is not, however, the light in which it isl the Бебе -—À и чечме , belongs the honour | Prestwich “Оп the боодо " Position and Age of the 
going А ved in th cast, It was vidently a of having raised the firs European seedlings, and | Flint-implement-bearing beds, and of the Loess of the 
lt ж. а i g some АР these are still prized, as for example, Maréchal S.W. of pem and s. wW. of France;” and of Pr. 
of the atmosphere, passing over nearly al Пр Duroe, Insigne, Christine, and Chevalier Dom mage. The | Desor on the Lacustrine o: of p Меш 
M һе author confe sses that he, has had very great first boná fide English seedlings were raised in Norfolk | Lake, will be read with inter We regret to notic 
d conclusion as to the light that | by Mr. Short and Mr. Freeston, 30 years = ? um en | the death of the veteran sede Professo Silliman, 
i ` vernal equinoctial weather) throws оп thel followed the рі Islands; and even of Yale College, at the advanced age of 8- 
p because ho has never seen its real Salter himself, at his nursery аб Versailles, pent Ren a| The Wild Garland; by І. J. Reeve, Part I тані 
pr before; but thinks it right k without | Series of fine varieties, arr 1 in MR in one called | Pitman, Puternostar, Row. This has nothing to & 
гаг, what is finally thou it i Queen of England, acknowledged to be tho finest with the flowers wh 
Ев еен then, to be аты тег eL rane ties have i all t ыам odditi 
инн eme coldness, va жеч inereased amazingly i женге, and а high general | ОЁ poetry, the freaks "er eccen nidos ee d Vus 
pn | 
The 
= 
t 
le for its extre 
cepe for their full Ише Ф maturing prete o'q b eid "m mm n reached, ое and macaronic effusi pu 
а д iuto the period of the : autumnal rains, and third chapters are devoted to the |8rranged in some sort of order. Re pt 
whole period of dered pates pers of the C ficiis x fourth, | our old friend, “An Austrian а: ior wfully arrays 
unk: for them, "by the prese unwonted | fifth, sixtb, and seventh, to specimen ng, includ- | Where the words of each line are P ined io a sing? 
cold, accompanied in P. o portiga of t us t тон by | ing the pro roduetion of Vindel Ping s "бе а т to | initial letter. There are тһушї habete, univa 
great dryness, and period by pes n growing cut blooms for кми; the ninth to sports; | Poems, e£ id genus omne, a Smitl's famous LEG, 
‘Night frosts, е and ne imo the tenth А classified listg; the eleve nth p a most | Leonine verses, &c. Thos 
hich certainly threaten à danger, pied p useful, succinct calendar of operations; and the twelfth must invest 6d. — The Watchtower, 
pass Of not;” bul we may be allowed to eli 
pr онр can certainly treaten ; when in the present time, For these various matters, the reader | published at 158, зеў be The first 
жойы is an adjunct implying | must consult the book itself. the Rev. Capel Molyneux,—TAe Day of Besh s "t 
whether they may be experienced or weekl li xu blieatios. 
ш decidir to our author **the whole season із | The Chorale Book for England, with a Supplement LE Г Т. 
Rie ini s unkindly and blighting by eold,| containing anb Hymns with appropriate Tunes. 
as ni present at all times, or Mid it сошеѕ! Longman & Co. 1865. Florists 3710019, 
poe qnom with the heat and Some few eis qe а clerical gentleman, well-known | Tam Report, dated ecember, of ihe 
would noi ba kindly for or anything." ДҮЙ rs fa vi ч 1 fora hint оп the train- | plants gro iring 1864 ab Chiswick, has j! 
титр ктүн Dei eer n erthel ict артга ing of a village choir. А grim smile flickered for а | published jn the Proceedings of the Ro al Horti 
origin, ess some of the followin g oracular resi эё diio | Society, au та 
pepe eyer known ^s England have been pro- | been t] «t sen ertain wha& have | Bepprwe aowiuMs, which relates 59. 
В ain с re Kaon ia рс рг he favourite med inl tunes in your parish ud considered 
TE КОШЕГЕ im der e o e n 
| for choirs will get into mannerisms and vul, € ER — 
ce is tho zhi | mi garisms, ES 
ught | which он obstinately is no hope of curing, and to these they cling Bieano. warf, free li abit um prin E ы 
izDs 
xcellent € Chorale Book was ublished so * e, with bright вои t flowers 
bd оеша the gcn shed ined rer d Ta n; EH 3 s 2d flowers au Аг. e diem 
nnebt, er [^1 Goldschmidt. andof first-rate ларе borne in v large trust D eie 
Te "i mw. plant A ans grown under glass 
cred 3 EM dei new to En; ongregations— | h f fow ыны 
[i d ciet --: e ү |—Moderately vigorous D йоне д 
gina" mgri стау stated >» Bios M a faie е "This тота good as ыс 
пет; being translations s ons Germ. -ON elerieal | Aor pi 14 
riend have ch eal tle Major.—D warf habit; flowers 
^t llo: нет sone ee his pen 80 е тау e d its previous character as 8. 
том wed. Many ре онем regretted vea. бан 
| childh ud ek hymns s whioh they had а к прет оту. The Bost or wao 
. A: hoo d the old tunes which had. at least E E EUM. in X5 whole collection. 09 
i і ve LA rie- — Moderately dwarf ; flower 
е One of the best of the 
yore urposes, and commonly 
f their ponet k 
ymns are now pu blished in a Su pplement, with the 
old tunes; some ot m being ve , wi the | Thumb. Бе ; 
ry slightly alte Waldo Pe.—Very dwarf compact habi д д 
ве ув id ate red hite ёуё. 
pad of good shape, with a sm: 
