292 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [May H, 
630 feet 1 consists beauty of proportion, and consequent gratifica- that there is a golden rule applicable to routine, which 
ani 18 fect wn has rode = or tne oF an | tion to — 1 ~ tes, which is the ultimate result aimed | e ry young ener nee do well “ have pos aae 
, 9 side of this Salk the ra, at by the artist in the studio, or the practical realiser | on the cover of his pocket-book in letters of gold. If 
will be itched, 8 it is expected that a dry line of in the field. n an othe lly pro- | should be this— Take care of the roots and the 
unica will be 88 the event of rain, portioned * * Ar o. is 5 By and the plant will take care of itself. George Lovell. 
of tents to the other. This ration | defor limb, rom 
from on 
8 hot, however, have alone completed A — — 
to the tents from the more distant entrance 
to the Garden and therefore it has been found deeir- 
construct anoth eet wide, 
— 667 feet lon 
Devonshire ane 
g 
* man) years been much in — of rem 
l ittee, under whose e 
15 themselves of plans 
2 to whom the execution of the ground- 
wor The Council 
ressly for = sr aera eir waggons 
na carts Iso been — ai aa of . portion of the 
otasi; i in the eder of the te 
‘Sous suggestions which we lately ventured to 
make as ssibility of economising the WASTE 
STEAM, 01 5 e by applying it to the purposes of | Pe 
re met i ne ty this 3 
not 
by Mr. d 
wher 
phere result 2 od 1 wo — E om, ‘by tk he e employment 
certain natural agents, artificially . ca 
cause e p y 
tion can be arrived at, and we such e 
88 y upon ner on because we 
know the relationship between a cause and effect. 
Now, in the o ulation, success w 
ever attend in pro l 
at with the lation which 
certain results ; an 
ust be upon eh aval principles, It canno 
that, famous as English pee are, they have 
2 8 days an 
engine fires are e pat out? — 
pet followin 
expe 
me employed by him for agricult 
of rough. 2 — covered by a 
jou of the tem perature was kept for 11 days, 
with the following re 
STATEMEN T of E Lee with Waste Steam, as a medium 
of Bottom- a heat, made at Penllergare, 1850. 
lished a correct | code of pee founded ipa 
da ta, 
gretted 
ural pur 
3 conducted a jet of steam for wenty an 
minutes daily e an inch iron pipe, into a bed © 
Time of 
Thermo- 
e meter. i 
ees, 
TE ab 
elec. 
Steam ute 
Steam not introduced. 
Steam not introduced. 
j Steam introduced „ 
steam not put on. 
Steam introduced. 
g 
* 
t 
the n 
justly. sc 205 coh — 85 can only amount to a 
r part, 
hat it is so—every on 
he 
. makh day hayes it Ph "of his duty to attempt to 
| account for 
ts upon scientific principles. I 
gardene grea 
facility h he can ‘develope the capabilities hey a wan when 
he aah l rae ar tory, it follows that 
if he co! e himself with the principal 
facts in iy ates habit, e jan habitat of every 
lant coming under his care difficulties 
: th at ay eee at 
men that it was a native of, the rape, 
uego, which, as far as p. 
attributed 
dening b 
j 
he real clots 
en who introduced plants without the requisite 
for their cultivation. nore li 
useful were not now 
parti convey: 
| erana on their introduction, I question ifa knowledge of 
3 oh by —— where 
to preven 
| Pharo 
Iti 
er fag for no sooner has i 
those who intend to pursue this subject 
the improvements already 
expand, take ke two lants, 
colours; and in on that the 
and with a 
‘bute the po — a of the one variety 
e ot ersa, 
mall hair peneil distri 
carefully nee the stigma of 
In ord perfec’ 
will admit, it be mn better to erie ngs a few 
irs in to raise a miscellaneous chance 
t will be a source of more in — 
and because a very small portion of seed 
will prove ample for his purpose. 
When the seed is ripe, which will be readily aa 
by the 5 of the capsules, let it be carefully looked 
after, and as ew the whole is collected, the ma 
may be kost ia r 
may be layered p 
fectly rooted, let the stay be hoo 
in which they be house 
! 
should be bee over “the pane 
lugs or other ts from attacking 
= DISEASES OF PLANTS. 
inued From p. 2 
To the genus of Punctures RE 
7. oe it kig 7 This is a white mould 
From th this it appears—1, that, although Nan possess, 
ced among the stones for only 20 minutes | 
was introdu 
4 day, the temperature 
er the second appli- 
cation of steam, until the „ ached 
3, that, at the en e heat of the — 
as 69°; is appears a concl 
o those = think that masses of h. Beats d 
Water, or Tented porous materials, like rough stones, 
will become so reduced in temperature by a fe 
— ratie withdrawal of the prime heating power, as to 
| knowledge, as observ 
v mirable 
no account of the 3 temperature t° 
at * 1 
the minimum night t 
the — . and 13th of April, durin 
iscontinued, was 34°, 34°, 
but we find that 
and 36°, on 
those pia 3 ely 
oN THE CONDITIONS 1 TO THE 
MOST *. CULTIVA $ 
One s best practi 
Fus Bicton), in alluding to a 
„ i states that os it 
tees nS? , 
wee near London on Pn 
uring which 
to 
of moment's sonidderatio tion. 
ae ce one of the greatest aids a garden 
after an acquaintance 
business, or profession, if“ 1 will allow the 
term, is facility for gaining a wledge of the natural 
history of his es; and sadependently of the great 
practical utility of such knowledge, it adds an interest 
to his dail es 
award to him as a 
Let us hove to attain 145 t position. 
ed by Lord Brougham in his ad- su 
iscourse, independently of its application to 
the ordinary affairs of life, or in the more limited 
sphere of = several oceupa more P- —5 is conveyed 
us by its acquirement 
ived fro) 
pagel a pp to his position. aiis it should be born 
panies intellectual pn airs 
a obtai taining the highest 
ands moral value in the eyes 
position ‘or wordly 
him in the 
trograde 8 8 hey a 
The mind is become 
an by which to estimate a man’s Pa clainné 
upon value; 1 let us ope that 
the couple of Pope will become an acknowledged 
m, th 
s oe makes the man, the want of, it the fellow, 
The rest is all but leather a 2 ella.“ 
of plant 
success which no treatise’ upon princi ples, however elaborate, 
ponla over hope to clncidate, Buß it has appeared 
culture ! 
to me 
pr 
r can 
ce with the routine ‘of his | t 
. S 
Prag rs egg of | 
* 
injuries of th 
np 
| it is also 
ly circum- 
pursuit, or tend | 
ya the effect. of aphides, and 
ei This is Ple nck's n 
em o 
s . When I have left 
n, the bra 1 ver y ten dar, i has gene 
bathen Ihaveremoved — 
usuall 
— “ies this so called albtigo, a 
e genus of punctures 2 
with n disease called mu gnoio (miller), which is A 
of w es in do 
inlined t to think tha 
in 
moist 1 — 
8. Honey. -dew of Aphides, A sweet trans nsparent 
fluid, which is found on the upper surface of the e 
of various trees, shrubs, and herbs.“ : cannot E 
how this uld ever hay 
“ee tat 
amongst fluxions, The most ignorant are aware 
f aphi 
quence when falling vpe upon. brad tien 
true that the e 
