790 
THE 
GARDENERS’ 
CHRONICLE. 
[Drc. 14, 
small and crumply, almost like those ot the old 5 % we 
Now, ow that 
it is difficult to get good fruits 
as Crabs 
to pelt on wits ay to school.” 
o | place at ahi stage ei the growth of the 
pee ies, that the roots have done their part, and r ven- 
ure to assert that more of 2 vil lies in mismanage- 
nt cone 
allow any v 
Kidd, Garnstone. e- par 
„in 
should not have been some from the Society of Arts and 
Manufactures, though none of those gentlemen might 
have re atents or me of the published oe 
The 
— ctorie 
or large farm, or by the 
village carpe A le part of it was at 
first contrived for the express giving bene- 
ficial employment to untaught hands; by the use of 
such machi de a essary, ex- 
T imb cfr iw 
n which woo 
box two or thre s, to see how cy were Bering on, | ways -i may be “sei ant “expe- 
— 1 told me not to do so. eeds, how- dude seasoned, one of the m us modes 
ere g o I have a pra . 51 of ‘everything appea ri be the exposing it to t — — 5 of water in 
that 1 -pri a ont with m t a u rae ees do | a boilin state, —— as many agriculturists —.— 
d well here re (in th eighbourhood | means of steaming food for cattle, the same apparatu 
4 Gee T rk got plenty of seedlings, but their | might with little, if — — be applicable to the 
leaves — not much larger than th Sloe After | seasoniag of all t uired for farm buildings, 
g Henfrey’s remarks in the “ “Botanical repairs, and sn iets s. steam vessels 
Gazette,” I wrote to he: i nd to take care of all the | for food were too small for re ception of timber, 
rees, and let they might easily be enlarged by wee Ke rege a few 
hope e an 
to bear . more of them 
n Middle- rough 
883 a Arthur Pott, Esg., Eden Hill 
Tonbridge 
„ f Thrift (Statice armeria) to wi ithstand |“ 
cal works that 
are in botani 
Pare is Pe eae 
placed u on PAR of 
about 4 al ron the 8 nd, without 
it. The weath t at the time, the cae did n 
show any signs “of life tor some time ; however, it teas 
gradually to revive, an wina 
poit x never got any more m 
eb ehhh N eA ow eS 
00 3 
you 
friend tells 
imes ill-flavoured and b 
made borders 
der the very if m 
to walk through his — and ask m 
contained black Grapes, an 
Ring Grapes ee 
fine N but a Yorkshire 
we may always ex at tim 
coloured berries, with u pes best 
Museais are 3 in one house, to 
and 9 
be 
22 
me 
e know if they fruited, so Mend I 
. Jo 
eas for beams, 
. | into see it =o or eyen roughly brought nearly 
iti pe; thus, be 
that of rai dew when they fell 1580 
s a hollow in the inside, and in it a number of | b 
orming. i 
d then Mr. Pa 
Ving Ch Cute we has been hinted that if you have 
ot fail to 
y sata were 
f this house | for this machine, 
adapti 
great iety 
š — for which patents 
tham in 
at 
20s. i cere by the use of his machine: 
so . o make a stea uffi- 
chamber need hot to be accurately 
made — capacious to receive the entire beam ; 
otherwise wood iously to steaming should be cut 
1 
to its destin sides avoiding the 
r 
y existing 
"decomporing 
of these 1 
ted. Besides 
the due seasoning a 
y, protec 
seasoned 
r two, are n 
me to acme more or less diseo 
y he material. Such defeets, ‘tt 
is true, are usually concealed and slightly remedied by 
ling up vacuities with putty, and cover eas. the smaller 
ith pa but we rite called 
aee p Bata 
On 
ps, be ot regretted that wood i for the 
ie of the “crystal los not been cially 
season ight have been dine either 1 means of 
stea St 055 vane an 1 
oceasioning delay ; pos 
nted with pi dale, fred * boch of | these 
g of w 
; itm 
the 
magnificent ne 1 9 w 
stance that 
n done in ae e 
axton, when giving Ag account of 
his plan, said ms 25, in the year 1837 he visited ail I the 
great w on, and in sev e great 
man 
ufacturing 1 machinery 
had been invented A facilitating E working of wood 
but ans — ving machin peen he improved 
pon * sas. mplete, a 
the 1 rt) 1 in Mies awarded ‘bin their m 
diness of manufacturers in 
ng useful 8 is well known; 43 it seems 
e that a spaini such as that oi ts 
e been Psa E exten- 
ts has been disseminated, 
the origin of 
the years 1791 
ished in the “ Repertory 
tus for preparing parts 0 
3 ae That machinery had been the 
subject of eulogium in the House ons, 
early in centur. erable number of these 
iden machines was taken to Po uth doeky 
-jand there, under 1 1 management, were 
brought into constant articularly, besides various 
in | saws, “ e for re rebatng out igh igo oe 
and for ing 
| at little more than half the 
was seen y the 
Le 
eh 
Py pamely, 
1 Eas y 
1 Scotland, for by a’ folks 
W 
ecount | cre 
w little a are of what has 
at | gae 
edal minds: 
Pact Vegetation. We often hear from time to 
time that o en one crop of vegetables is destroyed or 
worn out, another somewhat different soon its 
w an example of this lately on a 8 
many building a im- 
hen 
substance its appearan 
another crop of bree lower in the aali of exist- 
ence, has appe: in abun . Mackenzie, West 
Plean, Stirling. 
Royal Richie e rape tet is 
that — * Todman,“ to speak 
—It’s no fair © 
wis 
that 
hae at — — a 3 
nd sae's a’ ihe rest 
t his nase — faith gin 
hr: 
orgather we him, as 
to the wie he Kronikle, 
Our Curatars a shentleman an no gaun 1 
at his kail, nor pe at the pidding © a’ the “ LA — ni 
— the south ap ever was porn. Gin he had only 
experimental he wad to oa * : 
WI 
for twa ora 
them, as mair pecoming ti aul 
rdeners. — much offended an’ 
Dougall Mel ij 
How to fakit e Ve n of ae induce early M. 
L great increase bf food might Be 3 ied, 
and that of a 1 ae bys sytem 
out bs a time the prineipl 
e En 
