THE GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
f PATR d E 
HO ME GROWN SEEDS, DARE ATE I REE. FREYS albert y iis this statement adhe following n hich the trial has been made, we find 
Jon, SUTTON anp SONS have now harvested and] Passage in i HEVREUL S ingenious essay on cies.”’ that it consisted g a lot of „and 
for sale all their new GARDEN SEEDS, and The author's words are these: —“ In North Ame 25 8 them into places wholly. foreign i 
mould esp especially, recommend the: under-mentionedi for ‘early rica, neither Pear-trees, nor Apple-trees, nor Peach- nature and habits. This is well pointed out by the 
NEW, PEAS os „BEANS 5 Per or Quarts, a, rees, exist in — ae oe g to the . wis aig N book we have just quoted, from 
er Quart—s, d. | Johnson’s Wonderful of our own contin e opeans, in settlin e the following extract, with.a few 
eo . Prolific: . 0 6| there about three centuries ma arried thither the verbal Nl ina z 
known. | 0 New Royal Custer 0 6 seeds of these trees; but in ead of re eproducing ou t they must have bog. and. be pianak an the 
— ee England . 1 ae Png Pi = 7 cultivated 3 the y Gilad at least in 1 jk has always been the pre opinion; con- 
e 1 “CAULIFLOWER, Per oz, in i ge Ei eneration, trees producing nothing but | sequ ntly, some cold corner is frequently selected, 
Warner's Emperor i 1 Pee hes 1 6 | wild EA re to be. eaten by people accus- the soil taken out, per to an cessary 
va Bers Nie CUCUMBER, R, Per Bick et, |tomed fa. our en i n The seeds of the and the bed filled with rich peat, in st He the 
Burbridge’s Eclipse : 0 . 1 0 American fruits first generation, pro- p placed. Here they grow luxuriantly; 
ane x 1 Champion. fil 4 duced trees whose | fruit * a little less bad than | but soon, in their d ce lose 
Early Kent oes * 57 Spine . 0 6 those ve swe — A. from | their blooming mender 55 br. Mos of the sur- 
Bishop's New Long-podded1 (€ POTA 3 genera to gene eration, ther reeptible im- |, roundi Fop opy over-head, and the 
CARROT., eros, True Ash-leaf Kidney. 2 6 P provement, but still of — a 250 that the fruits | pernicious drip fr thar leaves renders 
Early Horn, selected . 0 4 Soden’s Early Oxford . 3 0 last p oduced are still inferior to our „Sickly, dirty, and 1 . reden some of 
James’s Early Orange 4 x Aerar ase — — > j vital is is re ble, those which have improved the their rougher. ne eighbours, rtugal or common 
_ LELIUCE,, Grigor’s.Early Round ...2. 0 ane Stop seed. differ from the fruits of Europe in| Laurels,; gain o eiT, and section their 
Sutton’ 5 Superb wi Lawson e Baris) Blobp wig 30 perfume. These facts, which M. Porrzau more slow-growing companions. this. case 
sple 4 — several others. collected | in in Virginia five. an ee ars ago, prove are soon aig se thet and the American ground is only 
Jos aa eee Sone, eee e 1 y a. succession of genera- | kn 
Garden Beors of 9 or quality, being all of home . at 
qually low pri 
*4* Early "Orders will have the preference of scarce 
NB! Parcels of not less than 10s. value are sent, car. 
riage free, to any Station on the Great Western, South- 
Western, and er. Eastern Railways, of to any office in 
on or Brist 
Address Jonn Simor and Sons, Reading, Berks, 
UBLE D. ane 
OHN SALTER or at this ti f all. 
* nem varieties of F OREIGN 1 DAISIES, nopped 
— nee icle of last week, 
in the — Serr 
ee t varie 
e been — 
. Hay cad fye 
tits S ing a Order 
et | Seeds r fag ae a > fruit trens of high quality 2. 
— 2 paene thei — at a single seed, and at the 
me justify my definition of a species. 
it it iti is ead that the hie of the first fruit trees se 
is, whether w 
perenne to. e of wiidings; 
he 
rarities and pompous "s Quean of n a. fehi i 
f Danes de Lermet,” are universally, to 
Nurs aie William-street, Hommersmith Turnpike. 
Kia: GOLIAH STRA 
b undred. 
f ing all ihe latest 
1 re i and all admirers are respectfully 
— — Robert Wuisney, Chester 
aged eee London. 
E aut moa SLATE WORKS, — jo acest a y. Filters, 
Salting vessels, Corn and F 
oo late for drains, 
1. 3 of Frome Slate Work 
i irec r. MaeNus's ‘Works in North W Wales, 
ENAMELLED "SLATE. “Chimney-pieces 8, 
Con mea nd other Table Tops, e 
iy at Tess than half tha cost ner gi ie ae 
e London 
RRT. Strong Who 
ks, the seeds 
irt. day, as is said to have ha appen 
ndings, 
istant co ed Ot 
. are ede, in M. CHEVRRUL 
it will be mo 
instantaneous. deterioration of . — fruits when me 
are sown in our colonies at the present 
ago. Is this so? can it be 
In à recent number = Dicxens’s Household Wi abs 
is an admirable account of the manner in which o 
of the wor un 
hich 
churches,, ing 
introducing Bs he Sea of all kinds. 
e Gardeners Chronicle. 
84 TURDAY, 9 — — 30, 1850. 
MERTINGS tor THE ENSUING WEEK. 3 ra 
s contained in three 
„Was the spell with whi 
No difficulty deterred him y 
from trying; with a resolute mind, good sense 
patience, he found that all human o 
3 
tacles w 
—.— quie 
ancestors pro- Li 
wed a sa wh 
The question ri whic ve re should like to rajan i 
evidence. that 
F 
time 
n| hard, 
sup porting 
grov 
nam 
pbsda reipas sa walks, and a har 
ardener takes na Aer in the matter, and his 
n he sees 
ants, n — ia t 1 he 
would. not Ses If n 
PRA r the Elm, 
and icul- 
wa 
rich an 
physicia 
erish., 
i — as to gee isease ; they a left. le; thee 
te; the roots, of their pow. werful foes form a 
he "balls of. earth. they wigs 2 with rol 
uck a away the fe Soren 
the, soil, with their hair-like roots. Probably they 
e an effort 4 
— i of June and 
J 855 are very p sara dry, — when rain falls it 
is M, torrents; this cannot benefit plants ise 
Meagan. Dee ETR ew Tis Tours in the from — . mee — convex beds, off which the water runs, and stan 
—— menc is the mids want, misery, |; margin in a pud uence is 
* >: rs i ee and ign ; he ended in a scene of ease, com- sen by A ep Aa Rar e drooping leaves. 
„ieee | Society Arts. fort, aad intelligence e. passing, shower bap mepa the roe 
Ce CO Gar ning presents, in another way, abundant at the surface, and, like, the. ap; of of TANTALUS, 
ee of Ania ; Meat 3 h. Look where we heightened. their afffiction. They lift thei 
. 75 2 peaareen, wij, the meti of“ ae TRY, is manifest; it is sapless, foliage for a short time To a amy noontide 
ee Medical 5 the open sesame of horticulture. _To some | suns, prove it to be onl st f expiring 
Tue manner in whieh: recent cases, let us first iphyt ature. ithered leaves miti in the wind 
d by olim rn is one so en It is not a quarter of a century since since they like the parchment label, fat ir, rank and 
that it can hardly be regarded as as uncaltvable a friend of ours nite character, w oe = „ and in 
Even the most mi e | mined — . — we have already . at pro- this state they are shown, in order to, silence and 
wo w them for the million. en we were | convince W that at they p oe been tried and 
"Ca ape Heaths Sanit ant pak every- | will not do. 
discu — this matter, ei s at 2 or in some of 
its more limited nd in order to raise 
uestion, we a a to bring eir, notice 
oll 
ENFREY, in a late number of the 
Gazette,” in the Course of a aai aen of the 
nature- of the lants, the follo 
that the 
which we would just 
is that in italics. Mr. Hen- 
seme that 
`- | day objects. of 
Pi for Lez and 
9 parma 
owing in 
first Apples, |p] 
| beco 
be foun 
eenhouse decora The country: 
rdeners were of opinion that the attempt was, 
elon h there, was A secret i in it; it was, l 
knew ty he but in the 
ried n 
We need not say that this sort of trying must 
carry josie along with it. In trying, as in most 
things, common. sense will on f i 
wwithonb: which no progress o 
ey 
. Heaths ate. not grow; at last ey r 
and the difficulty is fo 
were pronounced unattainable; 
enough were the 3 examples; but men tried | ex 
and tried again, until nas Be roe become the © glory | el 
of the summer. Just now e informed that 
wer-pot is the cultiva 
e and haf the os of III aot try” 
me en We: * aware that 3 are to 
in all * who assert, as Mr. Mac- 
PHERSON up — — have canis 
a in their part — he country -e tried them, am falls may be 
ry one has been disappointed ; they wi 
2 with them.“ But when we ik a little into e 
* WATERER’S System of Growing the Rhododendron, Aza- 
in the trials w pom op Mr. Maceuzaspx 
describes. What called Ameri 
phon gt in poe espe, — at have 
n them 
so ont 
owing on the hainen of Ba, oe — 
in ir ae the air is unceasingly c 
with moist 
What * hoe has to do, then, in ois poi 
for his American plants is, to o kee ep them 
surface of the surr ene g gronna so that * ae 
retained in to give them. 
of soil apte ai litle resis to the a “Of 
hair-like ; tate on 
wi 
lea, Kalmia, &., by W. B. MACPHERSON, 12mo. Sur EIN. 
Pp. 46. 
many Sg oc . the w 
| Rhododendrons, Azaleas, and similar plants, in the 
