CHRONICLE. 
9 
648 THE GARDENERS [Ocr. 12, 
W n 
air by opening ong a fon 8 the ventilators to a greater ie) under the corners, if of wood ; - by keeping the; local in The remark. about the chimney-pieces 
3 Ñ I > Frames.—Forcing of plants into slides open in the sides of the frames, if of brick. The minds u us of the man who maintained that a aes d could not 
N $ years old, because to his certain knowledge its frock 
flower on of these bers lights “Should kept over the pl en heavy was only six old. 
where a considerable display is required during the two drenching rain is falling. Should any of the plants Diez — Puis LEAVES: have always found a little 
mon e year. In all let the excite- | sho flower stem, which they will sometimes do, it anon, an 22 — —_ gage aa hich 
ment be very ual at first, and by means of bo will be requisite to destroy the pips. This should be common, a the Acarus — into the leaf iti la vat 
t keep the roots a little in advance of the tops. If done by removing them as well as the foot-stalks, but by | cult to suggest anything for its removal. Early syringing 
the Hyacinths were po at the time and in the no means should the stalk be broken over, as it wil Tittle pests possibly "be of use, for the removal of this and other 
nner recom ended, they will now have e | sometimes rot, and so doing carry d into the —.— * K. t, Holly, Yew, if not high: fed 
ts with roots, and a portion of them may be ta p | heart of the plant. Carnations AND PI os ue darter kind, Tree Box ; for one dwarfer a Cotoneaster 
and plunged where there is a slight bottom heat; but | potting off, as the layers are ready. a P cro — a. A low fence might be made of Savin, by 
anted very early, let it be very moderate, and | much moisture. thing is so bad as damp for these | „£ ——— Shee IL th 
accompanied by a free admission of top air. Encourage | ve dy plants, at this seaso n of the HoLLY- mie Een — 5 2 N ana Late kate i 
h manure water, an and remove any flowers | nocks.— Do not delay makin the necessary y plantation, Peac! the Elruge, Violette 3 and Impératrice Nec. 
which can be spared, to give greater strength to the | either plant singly on soil well enriched ; rows, tarines a ‘and the ee oe — — * 
2 7s should 2 = t least 6 feet asunder. Ve ery fine| aaf“ Elten “Cherries ; Glout Moreses and. Panes Sota 
FORCING DEPARTMENT. 
_Where t e plants are now swelling their 
fruit, t let the temperature be well any 4 i ne the 
ae 
e's season; a 
* a 
Wee in r ere during 
first selection, our readers 
may consult the or ther 
CHEN G 
ocession p grown gr 
rocess should be adopted, not 2 to oik a Let the We e Ouid, Pabba ages, oe 
their growth, but to reduce its rate b N and Let , be protected from the ravages 0 snails, 
mitting as much | by dusting them with lime and soot. The s — of 
all : 
allowed to fall be 
swelling 7 4 fruit ‘hy still, with cer ge, 
with liquid mani ES.— In a plying fire heat 
drive uses 
eet he or February, 
If any Vines have bee 
e 
ing care 
latest crop of "Cabbage Lettuce, intended to 
come in for 
ck during rainy 
| beneath the frames be ed, e 
it | ashes placed below the soil, which will help to keep it 
y SP 
well drain 
ugs, &c. 
eak or injure 
stand — 
arly TO —. shou 
est, a er 
— 
glass sashes and w irm, and as t — are 
ch less expensive, ar way preferable. 
Light can —— iy iting ihe —— at the 
n | ba i by re 
ving them 
= Nama when it is faite without ‘beibg frost f: 
State of m Weather near London, for the week ending Oct. 10, 1880, 
observed at the Horticultural Garden, Chiswiek. 
INSECTS : 
» Orleans Plum, e Jargonelle Pear.||— OC. You may sub. 
k Nectarine for the Nakhon if you can 
i 0 e others, you would best proc 
ne- eee 5 ees. The Vines you propose will do, 
= b non-hall being planted at the warmest end of the 
For sout —— the Large Early oyal A > 
Noblesse, Royal Geo and arde Peaches ; and the 
Violette Hative * 1A Four dessert and eight 
kitchen Apples for rpa Prid Dessert—Golden Reinette, 
ibston Pippin, t of Wick, and Scarlet Nonpareil, 
othing of im 
ndn rtance 
in your plan whic requires criticism ; quite the contrary. 
Employ two seth. pipes, the upper for the fom, the lower 
— the return. For 80 small a house — ll have heat 
— that pona 
orks — — —_ — — 
r the shelf, a 
ant your ir Vines ont Sade the 
kale, &c., Je kept damp; or for preserving such 
Dahlias, if kept dry. We — the slope in pencil to 
here is a full account of Polmaise 1 
— Horticultural Society, vol. ii., part 1; and 
very numerous per and plans in our volumes for 1848, 
1847, and 1848. The — . — apparatus is the common 
rick flue, which, well bw "S and clean, is 
as good as any other aise answers perfectly well, 
a sufficient heating 
If a will allow your trees to be infested with 
Bolm 
when properly constructed, and when 
surface is prov 
Tim, 
e same here is no means of cleaning it except 
times 
th hot water. ca 0. 
m 
to the objects of the Ga rs’ Chronicle, as most of 
sects now, and on several jg occasions, sent by “ T o 
ection ther 
the manner formerly described. m 8 
done as as possible, that it may pot interfere with TEMPERATURE. | ; ave no connection t 
the out-of-doors training, which should be ihe Ai ber n d | atana for a few weeks, are n cer a- 
next month. Fon Pirs.— Rhubarb Wren |1 foot|2 feet 72 amellias, and ‘pot pianta in „ 
should now be in pro er. | deep. 2 4 uted. mo pores ot oe the 2 olader 
may be m: very well in any place 53 | 544 | S-W | 00 —— ure. ä 
x ofa M on 10 He aw. a N ſorningside. A very complete example of a 
th and exclusion of light. 52, ss 8 W. .00 = nee ooarrence, Usually but one sepal assumes the 
2 3 t h t W. e 
or bed ry e gem furnished with bot Ten 828 oe 2 32 OF — Micklewell. 1, Beurré Rance Beurré 
by or hot-water pipes. — — Diel; 3, Passe Colmar; 4, if you compare the wood tan leaves 
per! to crop to render it fit for use. — 58.7 35.3 518 83.7 ou will * find the 9 eat 5 ae a 
-be more absurd than i : ne; partially or agreeing with those of the mar ; 
as well as its appearance is 4 — se al 8 tight. C. 1, 3, Passe Colmar; 2, appears to be Flemish Beauty ; 
o = à — T very fne; and boisterous at night. 5, something s; 6, decayed, so that it cannot be 
¥ - FLO 2 AND SHRUBBERIES. = 2 — and col à ined whether it is -= Kilwinning or xY 122 
; * : — 8, t 
: ery 3 can added to re- — 10—Clear; very fine clear: ran bry The e 5 ws Di pei — 2 "6, White 3 7. 
ference to this t e ‘Mean temperature of the week, 6 deg. below N. acne ne wie 
taking up of : yaar k Ss . tse —— Passe Colmar, imperf ems te blossom; 9, 
ceeded mh There 15 l of plants, which, if e Oct. 15 „ Henri ¢ —— py he No a2 Tamy 5 ip Bastor randi a 
g i 
taken up and potted in autumn, would, if they survived, revailing Winds. — 3 8 5 Biltam virgata . 
prove as in the follo season, from their F . not 
fine C. crenatus. it is not yet ed. It does 
produeing a greater amount of than young plants; EE a in the b; eph of Salm 
but few have much room for keeping i Fiz Dyck of the plants of —W 5. eeraa anne 
Tt teal of the ee. plants wink GNEIS 11. ana keep ien 
mos use of the flower- n ts pm eserve 3 6 h the winter dry, and where frost cannot reach them. 
sical 3 some 
U » P the m ily managed. 7 1 @ M. Diplotaxis — A opm wod N — 
nless very large sp s are wanted for next year 9 2 panula, not to be determined by such a specimen, "i 
the sides of the plants be pruned in, so that the pots The 2 i 2 — — ——— 1 Be Vitis. 3, aud 3, Lastrea 
may stand close together. All flo hould be re. | M8 -der. fi deg.: and the lowest on the 19th, 1843 therm 22 dege spinulosa; 2, Polystichum aouleatam ; 4, Asplenium Filix- 
moved ; but, with the exception of E pruning, every — — — mina; 6, Osmunda — 7, Asplenium lanceolate 
health should be preserved, l the plants are picx N a mpegs to eee “ee ndents. The avg and A. Adian aa ot Bein Pior oa 
. 2 UMBERS ENERS’ CHRONICLE: Th h istinc 1 e “0 ition lora. O. 
established in the new so Shi -p they may be cut| begs to sayt that. the ‘Slowing may be had. An ge deer Hymenophyllum Wilsonii. 1 
down to any convenient If the soil is moist pie will postage stamps equivalent to as many eed is p e „the corn of 8 of Grass called 
the time of potting, iums, Crassulas, M numbers as are 2 e them sent free typ post. _ Sorghum aliàs Hol hum. Srl 
* and other succulents, should have no water The volume oe be 1 Pi * gand “or 184 8 peice ve Toda. 1, : Baida — pete en ET 
ad. e i — eh 
till have co to root; it is by the abuse of price 30s. The volumes of former years oth 23 iE I | Mic Next week. $ 1 
this sAr that knäna plants ts are killed. After 20 31 22.81 a 7 A 1155 16, 17, 18, 20, 22, 25 24, 26, 27, 25 29, 8 ; WPP, 5 of * will attract rats. 
set them on the north side of a wall, where , 31, 32, 24 at you wan penet 
; i 5 ’ 18421. 4, 6, 8, 10, 1, 16. 18, 20, 31, 32, 42, 45, 50, 51, 52. Eps : B. Send your friend * 
. have some shelter from cold winds, as well as 1 13, 16, 17, 18, 20, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31. flower and seeds except such as come to aud den 
off sudden frost Ae 3 ht, kir J — i ay etes tr z do, fipa, 46, 45,66, si. Holla er u —— there. 
be urmg nig p: ean po: 1 3 purpose. t 
8 f 845—1, 2, 3, 25 213520 11, 13, 14, 15, 17, 1 20, | SHRUBS: A J B. Tree Box will possibly suit your 
1 e n sheet of canvas. 21, 23, 24, 25, 27, 28, 31, 39, 40, 41, 23, 48, 44, 45, 00, OL, 5. | SEWA 3 of Gconomic 4° 
e -o ayar ey w recover ; and when 1 „5, 6, 16, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 20, 22, 23, 24, p and, we suspect 
be ih. © dad gener oo om ~] Are 7,6, 0, 10.14 13, oxa awp, TAN: x <u should consult your solicitor. of 
eed A, „ Oy 14, 16, 15; 20, ou 
en witli tae aa jo ho aga 21, 22, 27, 28, 29, 32, $8, 56, 27, 41, 23, 43, 44, 45, 46, 47, 48, | VicTomta:, I V. We decine aequiescing in — 
he Sry | : . » regu reginæ, amazonica, pey $ W. 
FLORISTS’ FLOWERS. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7,8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, | Will be give n in Paxton’s “Flower Ge Garden,” when g. 
E ee tado md Devoe | 25 Pra a, 8 25. = 27, 28, 30, 33, 34, 36, 37, 39, 40, rr © illustrations of the — = 
; eee PS 84 except fi, 47, 15 52. pae what is owt In ample time for 
EES: Anna had better l; „Milton Great tell you what is kno about operation. 
oe —— e ee a — 3 pi 1 — 
BITISH ee Henry. Fhe reports are published an- erin e pit W 
nually, we presum be purchased through book- e roots will not be too far 
3 A = imagine you will have heat enough from a 
Buoccont Foxaus ; Iyston. The Brocooli leaf is infested out early forcing} __ 
„| Cystopus pte eg „ of which you a fall account FLOWERS. 
means D and N, Aristolochia Ips NG. Tos. Paneg, No. 13, is a full flower, i 
CREEPERS 2 — and showy--an essential ‘in 
5 — 8. ; but in oer respects it is much t 
— al ‘Flora Historica. — ge 17 is neither novel nor 
r 
