360 THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE. [JUNE 8, 
lants. Nothing urrey, Bouquet de 5 1 255 Shepherd’s Victoria is] Jun S Fine: fs hn at night. i 
oer for out of doo cept in very favourable — 2—Clear; slightly clouded; l; very fine; clear amd cold at night, 
the machinery than ee on this point The prin 
r — ing N uite 
* aiie the flowers of 
it and | some aie others, which are very A in the 
dean flowers are wanting in texture 
and let yoe oin 
ist Nature, by giving support 
0 perc = 3 
when 
gracefully from rn the ine of a lof 
carried out, the plants wi 
whether i in or out of flower. Every individual will 
ect imen of art, 
have confined itself 
they 
shapes in which shrubby — 3 plants 
. trained. An i 
same time, we object to “thee = ep 
it bei much sm 
lf we sculls understand the works of Nat 
Sennen we ld se the form, colour, 
ure, and habit of the ‘lowers, leaves, — stem 
— distinet ont yp admirabl 
every dist with each o A 
whole; and that if — — be altered or 
etry of shape 
assionflower — — ee tel t % 
owed itself 
and most 
e — sense of = wek 3 as art will h in this e 
8.0 
in n aang nit; 3 but N me 
still 
are 
Apak arag] elipping 
aize, 
1 5 * rate — 4 . 
ate 
Sas ae 
HAR FRUIT GARDEN. 
If it is the desire of the cultivator to carry out the 
„ but which, during 4 its gro 
damaging the portion whi 
te ts coming up at a tools ; 
e be left to form 33 * may be taken up in peres 
urnish new — „= ms oe if Ta are S wa = 
— | 
quired. berry o ae 
should be des 
trees with a little macken The clea 
ceeding issolve e lime in walla; and after 
allowing it to subside, ny e the trees with the 
clear liquid. 
and — or D aa the 
est way of pro 
ORISTS’ FLOWER 
n 
and, a e we aa 
— (or at versel) to * broken off, unless 
required. When this is removed, the foli 
* — 1 bulb 
Ae our experience tells = tha 
othe erwise, 
is bed, it will be beter 
mutilated, the original . is lost, —— * W eee us | pig ct on until roots a aa i en up. Cann 
— ban aen in a great m 
320 “a 
Grapes just colouring should be assisted b 
ture in oom ar asconipanied,. — 
ith a m 
S 
Ha 
ne 
re heat tin 
ve 
The great 
ved from the front 3 
the syringe. taken to prev 
‘by the the fre quent use of 2 the —— hare 
— > ae insects. When no 
E 
® 
h 
2 
8 
Z 
= 
E 
S. 
© 
> 
2 
8. 
So 
5 
BES 
et 
-a 
© 
m 
£ 
5 
8 
5 
= 
© 
2 
— 
5 
8 
i 
S 
y atte 
the direction which will afford them 
n in our variable — W — which — al- 
lowed to go —4 ly to rest. 
P GARDEN a SHRUBBERIES. 
Active 3 shou taken to prevent 
ravages of caterpillars, 5 es, 
and 
— s allowed to 82 h — unchecked, will 
idera mage. he best of 
early npc * r 
few icine ahas they may be able to make a 
y next season. Amongst the most 
Nosegay, 
r part o of ~~ “ars me 
ing 
po sudden a 
ts in the best 
— of a omen develo es — —.— 1 
Cater- 
ad- 
3 in 
d be pai 
who possess only a 
eredita 
suitable 
Anais, Jehu Superb, Hero 
P 
rated sap, and | th 
ane oe — and 
uring | 
* 
to 
ble 
are roe for aut: 
RNN cient 
the prety — will ma ake gre 
Give li 
All ero 
state of 
unt stage in which they are useful shou 
re 
rich moist 
1 ‘mandy poem, it will 
sha 
mine the points of the shoo 
aphis or 
ar 
», tacked on light deal frames, m 
e when e 
the ye for 
crops, which it is an * to Pass i o 
perieotioa in a short s arly 
coh ge &e., Mier be Considerably 1 4 
Bas: Maly ered with liquid manure ; first loosening 
e surface a the soil with a fork, to allow the 3 = 
e mass m re thoroughly, at the 
time to produce. a surface Jess N to ken 
tion 
—Slight haze; xceasivel ; 
ye oa — fine; H ns till —— 2 lisana onid, 
on, 
the soil, is in its allowing a freer action of sun and air, 
ime the growth and increase of worms 
are used 
in ‘a eases, As soon as the e grown wi within a few 
inches of the pis of the stakes, the tops of the plants 
should be pine Do not allow any crops h 
mediately 
The early — cus of * now re- 
ing ; 3 25 the present it will be sufficient to 
jerar nest 
t 
r to cultivate these salads 
duri sum: 
er the shade of a are wall during the 
State ofthe Weather near London, for the week ending June 6, 1850, 
as observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswick. 
Raiu, 
Wind. 
Min, 
1 90 
8 E |D 
40 E. 00 
37 E. 00 
44 E. OO 
55 | 66.5 | 59 S. | 200 
49 8335 60 S. W. 03 
43.4 | 58.7 881 | 564 | 03 
. g 
2 eee. Sen e icht haze; AN cloudy. 
uh Or mmenced a „ showery, 
Mean ol the weak — to the average, 
State of the N i Sc. years, for the 
e 
S2. Se, No. of g —— 
we we A test 
Jue. pi E88 | 28 | Xenio ee 
aS | 238 | == | Rained, | of Rain. ac ae, 
Í | 
day 9| 713 | 485 59.9 10 0.50 In. 2 4 J 1 80202 
Mon. 10 71.5 48.9 60.2 10 0.9 1 114 7142 
Tues 11] 723 49.6 60.9 7 0.47 -|7 1| 3| 5| 7 
ed. 12| 728 49.4 | 61. 9 0.78 — 51 3 1| 5| 602 
Thurs. 13 737 | 49.8 | 61. 9 0.5 1} 5! 31/2 642 
Friday 14) 74.7 | 50.4 | 62: 8 0.24 112 4 1046501 
Satur. 15 74.5 50.6 62. 9 0.30 1] 3) 424424 
The highest temperature during the above period oveurred on the 1] my 
and 13th, 1842—therm, 90 deg.; a =y the lowest on 15th, 1841—therm. — 
otices to Correspondents. 
we canno ries priv vately through st, 
ready to give er intormation through our columns, 
nt to the labour of writin 
Back ona. Full 5 will be given for 
and 47, for 
CHISWICK l A Country Reader, May we beg of you to 
consult the 1 advertisements, The next is July 13-and 
— -Hea 
* There is no room to doubt the excellence of 
‘Hartley’ s patent rough age See some correspondence 
v it in another colum 
:A — 
Grape Your r Grapes split 8 no peki ore sap 
cham they can ho ld; so of the e may be 
either that the ov dg yee not — fast enough, owing to 
injury . ae it, or that sap is poured into the fruit in 
undue one 
ow —— 
Insects: S R F. The Julus sent is one of the larger and rarer 
ba? the British species, but it came <r to swat" The 
umes of * aa insects in Jardin 2 s Li- 
N with W Lia Entomologists Tex sok will 
most probably a answer your wants, I. -A e insects 
mon cockroach. Place pareri on the floors 
wich a a bit of bread in each, and some rags round it, 
e them creep up. e smooth 3 of the 
basins will prevent them crawling out again, and they must 
t in the morning. —— 
such like nostrums, are useless. 7.— 
Clr e 
your 
dii, they shall be 
HR B. The —.— — — have done so m 
of 
—— for th ead a — the trad 
— 3 when they are —.— and then shak wien: trees, 
seen will fall to the ground, and must be de- 
wa ed. W. 
Names oF PLANTS 
tum.—J let 
more than a morsel of a leaf “Secured by a p 
aper. Whatever you may have intended to send must have 
scaped, 
PARROT Feed it on pe bread and Hemp-seed ; 
PaxtTon’s CoTTaGERs’ CaLExp — may be had at the Office of 
thi per, or of any bookseller 2 3d., pint for 25 copies 
for distribution amongst cot rage te 
4 — 42 Curl is caused . cold and damp. 
„ d mildew. ho ego will 
ll the last, ar ap in time 
rener å 
2 well known disease pei 
The cause is unknown; but is 
BAL 8 by E. Solly, price 4s. 6d., second edition, 
e 8 enlar, 1 ee ae be had of all booksellers, and at 
eae 
Oe 
8 5 
f: 
0 
E 2 04 At the request of n 
—— the — ot his wai, — now — 1 tear’ 
33 san be 3 warded to any epi bya 
P. 1 t to an ames Matthews, at the Office 
. post free; 
order 
never make a s T 
proc 
ly to af Newington, See advertisement in 
another column. — F P, If Seakale be not cut before it is 
far advanced for hee the plants should not be cut down, 
3 aug — oe torr rye for the next season by allowing 
SEEDLING FLOWERS. 
Anon, A good addition to e 
a All may 2 varieti 
—.— bu 
cat — ee 
— o kinds alrea 3 gA B. 
rth growing for pure whites are scarce; 7 
rt-coming in the p ä ential to a good f 
4 C. The oran seedling in the way of formota 
elegans is well worth 3 » Ss: * ** rabersints 
your seedling 2 some e ago, 10 . 
eee. is _ of the belt Mì Mimuluses in cultiva ee has yellow 
flow 
— 
serrated edges and oo dame 
s 5 3 “Ma 
ee sie C. sedis iwi y lik T Ten e last 
— J C. Your double, dark (nearly black) Wall- 
handsome, and well worth cultivating.* 
* ons have been received too 
a nee 
