iq Boars, without inj jury, or rather: 
44—1850. | THE F 
WATERER’S R OF AMERICAN 
LA „& 
OSEA W begs to 3 aunounee his ne 
Hilt N. „Wo na a 
a ; 1 ng Sure idea of planting the ensuing 
autumn heul Laas ther sélve ee Binen; ogue, 
RIOAN FLAN 
OHN WATERERS CATALOGUE or AMERICAN 
‘PLANTS, ROSES, CONIFER w published, and 
may oy — et on — — one It p hate — the colours of 
every Rhododendron worthy o f solui eo thus affording pur- 
chasers 2 n p making se ection 
America hot, — — 
TORGE™ “TAUR MAN, NunszRruax, Woking, 
Surrey, 1} mile from the W. ng Station of the South. 
Western . begs to announce that he wort ll t published 
a new an lete CATA 10 Oe of an American i Flank, 
Q 10 Exe ns owering Shruvs, Standard an 
Dwarf Hoses, Frat and’ For Forest Trees, &c., which may be had 
gratis on appli 
J AND J. Fals — — an immense Stock 
° — 9 e FRUIT TREES, trained and un- 
55 
ifferent ge situated 
near Besancon, A hundr ed ee of Apples, the craft, Sune with a blue —.— bearing myste- 
Pears, Plums, “Apricots, Tulip-tre &c., | rious wis cti 
almost all of this year’s woo 4, ees ent an 
in the manner 
dri 
CHRONICLE. 691 
each other, in on kitchen garden of in- wisdom and foresight of some t ro ener. 
a caleareous plain We did for a moment e ie Pe e of 
descri 
uried whole epithe t, mu been A ee in an 
with their ends in the t nor which has e such us 
and at this results. We entered upon our task, then, under the 
moment 1 85 ete in Bee open air, and pow impression of Milear. to the world a aan secret 
ao just as Wi 
to the 
when 
2 
tof them 
to the air (the bud) is is “the seat of active 
especially in the Pea 
which aire 5 is 1 
his 
good o 
thout difficulty o serious 
the ae Suduk | . we readily got through 2 feet of common 
vegetation, Sinker soil ; i encountering a brickbat nor a 
ears and e ee the buds of clinker, a hors e's leg nor a bullock’s head. Th 
e progress compound 
was no vid 
one, and its quackery; the ground was as natural 
— 
adoption can hardly fal is increase the chances of remained untouched since the Del 
pagat 
successful pro 
ing ed . 
Att the world, at lene * pay art 
ae habits at Brit 
of the garden- | Wi 
ritain, has heard * were bug about to um a pond and in 
ating of F Peaches, Nectarine, Ap Pears, of a su at N Court. Ex very we haoh k: puddle ! 
mene i tang Ne ge ice Ea) oe tment of th ago a goos 5 see it at eb once in his life; it is a It is 12 years since we saw this plant, but it then 
prove inte a bo a voty Is 1172 stock of o . tw e and object in the e of the 510 Kc to become all that it is now descri ibed to 
anxious. to a a on ofthe same the atten —.— kept under lock and deny» well be the — under which it grew are 
oan 9 10 A 5 
aey intend Ti ee ree we ag ther hopo mil hor Meer —— To eee . | spondent's desertion ; cnn hea pakanin 
ins eir libe: 
un w F. also beg leave to solicit the attention of Gentle- | immen of Grapes borne by this Vine, and over which it grows is before us, and is too hard to 
a to mae hag Greenhouses, O 8 L to 
‘of Cape Heaths, Epacris — — Azal 
— which is unusually — und fine — 
—— the most moderate prices, to induce the 
— of extensive 
Nurseries, ‘Clapham, near London, Nov. 2. 
WOODLANDS NURSERY, MARESFIELD, NEAR 
CKFIELD, SUSSEX 
THE PLANTING SEASON being near at hand, 
WM, WOOD and SON resp — A ce their friends 
a peere RO “is dh this seas aang age — 
ever. the above, the oa alain 
description mtg REDING. AND TRANSPLANTED FORES 
E Tween, Le. ., ‘well worthy 
— aa a x 
Catalogues will be sent free on application. 
Eee DENYER is now — 3 
4— 2 3 CATALOGUE ot Roses, Pr 
r3 Trees, &., Th high wil cod 
heas enclosing two N stamps to his preet 
forwarded, by enok 9 E. DENYER informs his frien: 
that he has no Seed-shop in London. 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle. 
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1850. 
MEETING FOR THE ENSUING WEEK, 
Tonspar, November 5— Horticultural 2 rm 
employment o hand-glasses, or bell-glasses, the 
pr a is to retain, in a 0 a iform 
moisture, the air which eae 3 — 
not 
with Pelarg and Fu chsias, and China Roses ; | 
but when he attempted e deal with Apples or Pears 
yeas same ma will probably ara ee 
mong the methods en from time to time t 
— ke suc culties, and to which we — not 
in ear 
earth and water. This was not attended with all the 
advantages he ee but it led to the di 
ne following plan, which he design 
S0 as to form a subterranean curve, of which the 
bes MO A is uppermost, the very * of the 
th urfac wee 
e being on a level with the surface of the so = 
A0 U this middle — — ae y ust be a good eye, o 
way the} whole length of the br 
e only part exposed to the air, 
with advantage, al 
“Although I did not commence my experiments 
before the end of ge I have seen quite enough to | 
Satisfy me that the method may be of serious 
“Two drills about 3 inches apart were drawn 
owerin Ne — — 
f 
for its vigor rous old age, it 
dance of the 
prepares sugar an: 
there pisu a 
ount from 
lately — 
ve Been astonished, much more than in- 
again w 
getting down 
Grapes in 
only be grown 
brick pillar. 
and 
and acid, and e 
solita 
t urea tness, concerning which we have 
t has been stated that its bs broken by the hands; a sample of its beautiful 
roots are in an ancient sewer, where they find abun- fruit was exhibited at "the last meeting of the 
rich materials, out aÑ which the Vine Hortioultaral Society in Regent-street, and wholly 
olour and 
ragrance, were e character just ar ofi it. 
and all that 2 75 de gene to its fruit. In 1837 
o have bo om era of 
ine, whose roots are not ina 
Here, then, 
fruit, upon ne a or any such place, but i or 
un 
ay „ vi 
owe — rs a this famous | about the same space as its celebrated rival, an 
the kind | bears twice 9 Grapes, of the highest excel- 
e have epee, striking exar 
e|] 
g. e royal garden vast 
what once was Cumberland r near Windsor, borders ot n higi sid att of which the Vine 
tary Vinery, sole relic of departed has no 
en y 
he folly of spending large 
No doubt the Vine border at 
mberlan be a was prepared original 0 
an experienced Gaye grower who good steak such as our predecessors thought 
su 
eal 5 ra we 
wards, and the s 
ts seaso: o An 
ical | set Maat up as a great authori j ined in- 
pe wrote a book about it— that aa 9 of a serviceable automaton as can be contrived for 
ed in a him. All schemes, educational, reereational, or ‘how- 
— after mystery presents itself, ever tending to elevate him 
when 
not the least 
rc with 2000 lar, i- la 
sons pirre surely have had somè leviathan Fa a FER : 
i rder. Let us its taund to form one elass of impediment to carrying out 
1 to 
Now 
ae 
mec 
e 
— re — desen 
wise, was nearly uniform not a : i 3 
| and a monster there; for, as we —— Stilton ch — oo a seinen 
so these were cent ‘of one w. bi make. prome 
we o the great pro lem which is to — apathy), 
resolve all this e development the border; way moua all maet ; now, -ane — folkë 
y Mr. Ixcram’s kindness, we were permitted perisos for eve on parade, yet if 
ot de Neves holes, to ascertain its ition, i 
echanical construction, and to ponder u 
late years Sart red for Grape growing ; 
thought that we had found a roc 
uddenly appeared to dim our vision. The 
fled, ou 
C’S egg, S0 
foan 
sA 
en we quantity of materials 1 suffi ; . once esta- 
mething | blished in soil that it likes, the. Vine needs little 
object | further care. Its chief desire is to i ARM, 
! have a w. 
d ourselves ticut, pry, salrow border, and that is precisely 
uccessful cultivator What it gets at Cumberland 2 : 
recommended $ iy ies to he concreted beneath, 
halted above; the first to prevent the roots 
ond t 
off| VILLAGE. EXCURSIONS, &c.—Letrer 
à s for succes ing the rains. An unsuccessful os p REAd the My last letter has pretty well exhausted what 8 ian 
the vital fluids sar pak uni the germ or al, 
other ie yapa to advise concerning village excursions, and I shall now 
oat : : 
: be incom- 
d, as obst —— ng ee jin of | be inclined to promote them. We cannot expect, in 
plete, and the secon 
i h that bore it. For the sun on the border. Another ge 
find universally in 3 the upon robbi 
an experien ced cultivator plants 
roadway. med of rage brickbats, and similar a 
tubbis an d 5 N two cro crops of ppe itself at all, Certain manh, kindly * 
n. wee: 
er 
ir roots ce 
o | the great Viele tk. — 
ntlem 
eless, to our astonishment, | ° 
his Vines in his 
e stum 
This morister, 
dge. 
arge bunches of Grapes, as 
ook his bo 
wice done, un untl the pit, a $: 
hou is 138 feet i and 16 33 which I have suggested does not admit of any one ene 15 
it ma y appear, t 
2 
8 
me respects, seem strongly a edete: i 
agricultural urer as a being 
upon | tively distasteful to some of the employers of labour, 
bound to recognise i 
black worthy men, not wilfully opposed to the comforts of 
beneath them. nest blind prejudice 
organised as if we were pro- 
Canterbury 2 But the plan 
OG 
8 2 
SE 
Fs 
the -stem of lightly ea he who. has been selecte q by thos 
2 fect 9 inches in cireum- of the party. No 
doubt: there will often be some one or other whom we 
Ire | patrons aud patronesses, who ‘can at any time in- 
t and bara themselves without the area eof being 
ec 
brown found in the same train or rin the same boat with those 
5 Php Dat 
uf. us may care to enjoy It 
mposition, its | our —— — oni been ee for squaring 
pon the | with the supposition that it must inevitably prove fine, 
