415—1850.] 
THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE, 
EEDLING ane — 
UNEQUALLED NEW S r the re — 
1 WHIBLEY be — to re 
We venture to say 
apples had ever before been tasted in England. But 
his Advertisem h of — 
Nursery, Sa 3 am 
AMES WHOMES, Royal P elargonium Nursery, 
ts sine gibi “CRUSADER” 
z Windsor, ean supply er ozen Plants o 8 
Catan gee at 36s. per 
eap.— ngk 
A— WONDE yh ba 
OORE te t 
G. a: to his Sa — a 20 of F February. 
rry Barr, near B Birm —— ten a Nt i 
ass, pr OF THEM 
— 
— — = 
March 23, siding 
Asters, Wall 3 aban 3 Hal 
Zinnias 
For particulars apply to WILLIAM E. RENDLE and Co., Seed 
erchan 3 outh. Established 1786. 
EEDLING PETUNIA 
—We have the 
arge number 
other Seedlings, — we trust will give 9 — to e 
yarieties we have 3 sent 2 To be sent out on Agel 
Magnificent, a fine crimson, colour and shape 
“ ae * Forres out last . but tap —— — 58. Od 
arge and distinct lilac, with a very rich dark 
— orn A 
2 $ large silvery blush, ‘with a dark rich Purple 3 
—— a fete lively. crimson lake, of fine form 
mgen; pas white, with a rich bright pink throat, sek. a 
an 
. — 2 white, lilac pink throat, veined, edges 
of -> —— —— die iy m — pink, large and —— 3 6 
usual allo trade e by ta king the set, 
or for thi om plants o of a 
12 new bre guste of mets poo „12 0 
12 superior varieties N 
12 fine ditto ose ee 
15 0 
varieties in choice assortment 
The above free post if required, 
BASS AN BROWN. 
_ Seed and Horticultural Establishment, S Sudbury, Suffolk 
~~ WOODLANDS NURSERY, MARESFIELD, NEAR 
— SUSSEX. 
ave D anp SON are now issuing copies of 
ew CATA ALO GUE OF STOVE AND GREEN- 
HOUSE PLANTS. to which is added 8 Lists of all 
anna — —— ilias, —— | — BA * — nas, Pe- 
Chrysant them „ with a very 
e collection 
anne 40 for beddin in. 
a — gn geal a large stock of Dwarf Roses in pots. 
May are the best months for 
| rf 3 under, the ‘selection being left to 
selves. 
Hybrid Pe d Bourbon . 
wor mt Noisette Ce 
i Climbing d to 12s, 
alogues will be forwarded, GRATIS, s —— 
NEs begs to inform the admirers of Fancy 
—— he 3 out on Pe xt 
o Gaines’s 
. 12s, to 188. per ee 
alge to 18s, 
of his Hero of Surrey and Cerise Vilio. 
On the Ist of May ready for delivery, his 
Seedling DAHLIAS ey Auckland, Empress of Yellow — 
Hardinge, Fancy d s Louisa, Hero, Desdemon ona, | bu 
Rotu ora Atalanta. Opinion of this „ber ak see 
August, No, 34; Sep N G 3 ox 
8 „ A yes 0. — $ — A ae > 
seriptive Catalogue o. e al n a ceol >g 
Dahlias, Pelargoniums, Fuchsias, Cineraria; 2 
mums, Azaleas, Verbenas, Rhododendrons, ae, may be had 
‘by by applying at the Nursery, Surrey-lane, Battersea, April 13, 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. |i: 
TURDA Y, APRIL 13, 1850. 
MEETINGS FOR THE ENSUING WEEK. 
Mornar, —— 15 — Medical . 8 r. u. | Tu April 18—Ro: 
2 —— Unspay, Ap yal . Sir. x. 
——9—5*2⁸?ĩ7ũ“ĩ4 8 r.m. 
Nene es n 
Deen 2 v. u. 
2 8 f. 
Medical . . 8 f. u. 
lan of growing early crops by aid of WASTE 
* 
qu 
rs of this Paper ground- 
be 
Aren Y F free and fall i 
ence e been shown 
gardeners. 
the Bicton Saat cg ry began in May, and ended in 
the autumn ; the nrg age plants merely swelled 
and eenn their fruit i 
th nd TS 0 
forced hardy plants 3 on be — to dis- 
pense with artificial prote 
Upon this point very little ace N 
one having instituted a series of experiments to 
decide it. We know, indeed, that in hal xs are called 
hot countries severe frosts are ope erienced for many 
nights in succession without in o the vegetation, 
if the air bedry—as in New Holland sforexample. V 
av 
are in rsmith, that 
some Pine- -apple plants having — denen 
jana hard in a neglected Pinery, nevertheless 
vived and produced fruit, which fruit we tasted ; 
and, „although small, it was quite as good as half the 
i ine-apples sold in the markets. But in these cases 
Phænix dactylifera 
olland 
Melaleuca pungens 
Heimia salicifolia 
Camellia Welbankii 
oo (The Gem) 
Orange (stock) 
anothus azureus. 
Diep. 
Passiflora n Habrothamnus fascicu- 
Bona 
Genista canariensis 
Acacia pulchella 
Begonia cel 
8 8 
Callistemon marginatus 
empletonia glauca 
Anona Cherimolia 
Lowest . at or ing the trial 19° 
Average night tempera 7 Al 
„ albicans 
Pelargonium (Ivy-leaved) 
Statice Dickensoni, 
d ` 60°, 07 
that this experimen nt was not tried 
with plants established during summer in an oil, 
t turned o of 
e 
— the power which plan re 
cold, even when acco ied re But it is 
very far from — 2 and requires to be Sie ree on 
nd varied i „that i 
no such high-flavoured Pine- | 
os, which aeee 
pipes, “ye oe a on neg! when they are either only 
y filled by the a * of the 
curren at 5 after the manner robal of the 
hot blast in smeltin Stone, but of — ad 
tem re. 7 
e dryness e is precisely shat cannot be | 8° 
ced senate byth 
the supply of food. 
venture 1 ayes tbai the 3 of tua a system, 
modified acco 
verse. 
“I may, — aa 3 that atmospherie air is at 
least a cheap and n commodity, and that to heat 
it e 
— in the a — Britain, and there- un ear that a Bri 
fore they n no * which any opinion „holy f. a n the surface; act: still if the notion be not 
on this question can be — 7 WASP faligon ean re an ts aide m Par 
The following experi * In ot of the bot hot air in jected, i ight — . i to 8 
December 1848, some plants were plunged in soil i an re terminate ù ra e O y ai. 
a Melon pit, the rn —2 eated; but the plants | face at which, while th — 
above it expose e open air, unprotected by | the et — of the air practicable, would not 
glass or other Seeing. The following was the result: | infer a great escape of heat; but even this might be 
SURVIVED. pr y weri * 
Edwardsia flexuosa . secunda — s of 5u = prei spos e eee pee the. menen 
Berberis tenuifolia Abutilon striatum rt 2 
— * me that the e 
the in inj — to any available . of par? manure 
and of hot air, — a seas nan ce very 
great results. Seg might be— 
m hot ry mig 3 pipes under 
and, if preferred he — pa te might be applied on 
— ara: but, arge portion of the gases 
would be driven "Of, cpl Y, into the atm 
“In either 
he heat for the al 
injection of air and liquid liquid, ‘the — rapidly and effec- 
tasiiy ma may the process be ffeet. 
In = — land is to be — ed deeply for 
varied su erops, the pipes should probably be 
laid at a — of 16 inches, so that there should be no 
terfi the plough or fro : 
permanen 
successi of Italian Rye- 
grass, the pipes might probably be placed ata depth 
only of 8 or 10 inches, by which means the action upwards 
of ht be — immediate 
and on the of 2 Grass The e 
N no nye cy be an aaa 1 succession of 
eavy outa season; for in reality 
it would be a system of continuous forcing applied to 
the produce of our fields, i 
eon be | ™° 
ied, the — would rh a different 
We believe that the -e suggestion of the 
y of — ng STEA 
UNDER 
possibilit 
than 
mains to blossom with great, vigor 
probably continue to a so 
our instead of to the produce of 
our houses ; and that by an extremely simple, and by 
e . 
might be still more applicable to market — oo 
prae of which is 
would rs af 2 amply pay for any 
m the price they bear, 
— which might promote it en 
ene e ena season.” 
d one to 
Objection vould 
a manufactory, ath penis 
there might bé some difficulties about it in mere 
agricultural districts. wae r good o may reall 
this way we 
— 
in , the neighbourhood of 
accomplished with econ enter 
25 tain no doubt, at least e * and November; 5 
and that would be a material But we cannot 
imagine that, in mid- fis kin kind o of gardening 
very d su cceed, — mere — — 
vegetable life; and for forcing a it 
* Tla e case of such 
as Mushrooms, — and Seakale. 
— — some of our we 
me experience to pro- 
duce, and, if so, we would ae ae invite ite them fa 
communicate it for discussion and e 
To the history of £ the Vicrorta e 
a 
oe 
