THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. 
243 
nice garden and orchard, aaga lots of Apples, Pears, and 
own gr rafti ing and training. 
you as if you we nyse 
But the fish they oa 
cheap if 
and he Polyphemus himself. 
gy 27, 1858.] 
Pi ater. From Midsum er to] i 
| = clean, wa a move resto as ore sap is os Fol trees, all of m 
sovember ze The Holly makes a d hedge ə alone, | Thu 
oe dorman the paeem but no mixture 
sin ans or . W. Fowke, Redhouse, 
f the great world. W. 
Uan of Books, 
ne.— x 
oe allow me to | small red mullet (rouget) at a sou each; and sardines, 
Bat Mr. Scruby at} Le Jardin Fruitier du have before us | fresh and delicious, t three s a pound: besides, 
how, signe, a very old ete 11 oan 12 of his vt tiful ae pn pa the | there were whiting, herring, mackerel, turbot, white- 
pots. It can ig a tonght:fo r 6d. per | first volume, a tirely consistin ng o of Pears. Those it and flying-fish. Then, in the vegetable market, 
= name it is being advertined | now n igaroan as fo llows : Poir ps Payenche, a com- | green Peas were to be had all winter ; wild s 
rustic paratively t unlike the Forelle, ragus and new Potatoes in February, and Alpine Straw- 
note a certain exten É d Ñ d E des Urbanistes, the mo: g of March; besides all the vege: 
d Mr. Pownall i in _— So P. sans pepins, the pipless Pear, r referred to the | tables and m ore than we have in England, in 
tlement. That law is now parents Belle and assem "of the *Pomologea Maga wiry the | great profusion ‘and ‘aes Game of almost every 
its dissolution is, I pope, a mere ques- | Bonne de Soulers, a kind of winter Bergamot, . known kind, fro ail to a wild boar, found its way p 
certainly seems equitable that all |in 1690; the Milan blane, Ponte in 1665 as the as T'S throug t the year; if it was not ex 
be T I canno rgamote d’été or- de Faj e; Bugiarda, a yel- | market it was alw ays to be sacha from the Fab 
astice of ying an on all th — nagar autumn kind ros Blanquet, known dealers , malgré the game laws and the clóture de 
i ets in in fact, : the (labourer- | in 1652; and St. Michel p al an autumn fruit of | ¢ 
ers rs ioe anties sho ould be SPEEA d as being first rate. M.| Asa 1 pla e to be sought by invalids suffering 
see kes passa represented as being 
as isne announces that in the = volame will com- 
fru 
from 
pulmonary affec tions Algeria seems not to be recom- 
e his monograph of stone 
: a week n the pay of a Sessubentinns by Madame Lo arg a “Exposure to the cold mists of night should be 
for some yea’ is now reduced to tt especially avoided ; for ‘no person ‘whose ri reqpiradany 
rior men, waggoners and ot! H dinat in 1857; its goveenitelie se climate, and 1 i 
poun at have been: the pact ri By the Rev. E. V L. Davies. 12mo. this or any other climate, without i injury, To be in st 
e, counties of Suffolk, Wilts, Dorset, | Longmans; pp. 163, wit ith four rs after sunrise, 
thes se years ? What a are they now w? plates. lids t 
nce is that W rab basks on the ent with oe under a 
Js. to 2s. poor-ra' "Hr ny whe in ti concerning t — resources A Alg eria ras thi tittle fierce mid-day sun; but if an Englishman were in- 
counties I suspect 6. r the volume. But it is a joyous, clever, gaua ng journal of | cautious ama to do so, he would probably catch the 
to Pownall’s proposition that 2 a aon a clerical sportsman who kno use of a as African fever ; at all events, as a stranger, and until he 
istered by local authorities would | revolver, or boar spear, and can sit = gt a yria like a | is thoroughly acclimatised, he should be careful not, to 
fact that generosity would flourish at ouin miy ew was in meet. Ra health fi cae take liberties which are only permitted to old friends. 
ice. The abian unions are | invalid, w. s! found it ni d he de sates with | But, besides the acclimatisation, the Englishman is very 
tly situated, and should be more compared with well ‘bred ney ae all sorts of shares out. of which a | apt to k he cannot too thinly clad, indulges, in 
ne having all the rich, I ] ould be extrac iod, For example, while in the | duck pantaloons and light ventilating hats; while: the 
was em e their hes at the same price ; iligen nee from Lyons to Marseilles a little adventure is | Arab i thed in warm woollen attire, and 
m f of ara ntig thes described :— car ries many a ard of coarse camel’s- hair rope, wound 
bate y the rate-payers end a to th 
ato do away with all the C aisahief complained of. 
b 
an I do the miseries ca! y 
es, but I must in common, , I think, with 
man protest ong nst the unfairness ‘of an 
ze the man w. Bgoya s 12s. a week with one 
or8s, W. H. 
only i a EaR ‘Mai 
“ In the same cnsringe with parealaes was an E 
lady and two Lyonnaise: the former wore a respirato r, | head. Sucha Pn is protection at once against ; heat 
which, as she was muzzled night have been dan- | and ‘old i “and, without doubt, was suggested originally 
erous, seemed to give some annoyance to those ladies. | by the exigencies of the ian 
is ges epaiok, one. ‘C’est affreux, For the seg Sa and health seems to be a charming 
answered the oth Upon which the English lady, | ary till the ae of Pag Sei later :— 
who aon itherti ta en no p in the conversation, | h without fir re, frontin south, and 
said quietly, and in excellent eawed ‘Believe m ay, the 
ladies, the respirator is a very convenient thing for leno retire pma the mo: ate of F ‘tbe ruary, and 
ugly faces. I pos ise you to get one without delay.” No | Mar cha av es a 64"; ge ‘ring the three previous 
o ver fired with greater effect ; it was a mont ths 55° g the „lowe st range from 
8; 
Ba; Sh ob 
oy the Weather sg Limerick. 
atwig 4 feet a the Grass in the shade at 2 
had rarely gostained, “and evoked in return a vo! 
ch as Lyon 
There is capit ar a eg pan 
1 boa: d lions 
on the 20th inst. was 64°; on the 224, 66°; | small shot su s alone or Wapping Old Sais may ia Toni. oa in the open as nis a many 
8a, 683°; on ih 24th, 664°. In the sun at | could ata: y Anall left the carriage, muttering kinds offer them selves to the sportsman’s attention. 
02°, hung as above. J. Abell. derisively : ‘Les Anglais savent ee les complimens y pire i TEBE all its attractions, Algeria ig not 
arron says (see p. 217) | Cest ponrquoi ils sont détestés country for tillers of the circumstance with 
yet to learn t! the fact of Messrs. Fleming and During three months passe in Algeria our traveller | the author’s explanation of which we must reluctantly 
_No ow [| visited all that was within a reasonable distance, and | take 1 leave of his ats easant pages :— 
fourd bu sah for an EL eh pene to complain the Mahonese, the colonists 
f. The ry was quiet, and so tho y opened | of Alg thri Aap race; but the raga of 
up by the Fench pois that “ With a exception of Glare a i Anie to no Vent of fertility in the 
1 | those districts i Kabylia which have not yet acknow- | soil nor of guage’ in hes vators. e French 
ledged the supremacy of the French arms, and | ¢ overnment has not li 
was only ths rg 
Have similar results bi obtained | A 
Sees Henderson, Horticultural Society’s 
Tell on the confines. of Morocco 
f Beni 
erent mae with, "regard to the produce of the 
In this case, long and tedious delaysin ob- 
i- Mzab on the borders 
officers have been n place ed in 
not bau effective as protec’ 
a concession of respect which a raat 
The whole age! Nae has oA ak 
ench and indigenou 
of | w 
the Great Desert. This security is of course Paes 
| due to French management : letters from Ta aoe 
be? are 
and his 
t reg 
to plant so 
which a agai if not mot Armi subject 
pa to yF loss z not only of the farm but of the money 
hich he has al y expended upon it. In the other, 
m 
given 
sar 
3 50 in whatever 
EBS eer. < 
its chief offi 
m hereafter.) I purpose 
i w if you wish it, with any 
is held responsible for it, and he is bound to 
offen der to p- justos, 
of pis 
Failing beg he h haiei cone 
Scraps relating to aehan 2 that t t may 
Ti hat on 
settlement 
is only wi 
tribe and under the pay of the 
is punished by | depositio on, fine, or 
dn ae 
g the | hi 
men as our ng ey leaders are eg ar cane 
to aive e and buoyancy to the colony. Taimi is e 
gh, ~ ng nsequently the necessaries of life are hi; 
t the re of the co va to the 0 al 
try is Siete eatest drawba ack of all. No 
h his new 
sooner does the 
ae . 
bP e homewards 
pry age ty ‘A few shar 
=x Arabs that, the French law is 
p examples have satisfied the 
not to be Taan baak 
he stands, on 
| the edge of the blue sea, with nothing bat it between 
him and his home, and, in imagination, he almost: sas 
‘ t 
Toeiy an exception, Indolent men let it 
fingers,and fast menoutwitthemselves. | hill 
ent 
h money | b: 
i “of from 
| even at pao Britain.” 
ou Livi 
ue 
+h 
aoe school. w md at speechless in 
eee erossed th 
E 
AT +1 
native hills and he does see the vessels which con 
D 
en 
ily to recal the siti Bais to 
ders, i pa 
mpression that a 
inhabitants of a worse ab than our 
e water and tak 
fish-market of Algiers. Every other man 
fod nhc h nit con has failed th 
- | often 
ing sem daily to the same not far-distant haven, The 
Brg is father to the act; afew franes pop Sehis 
berth, and in 48 hours a in 
aeo | onists pe a 5 theirs 
linen, | is a crys a = pigeon when. nonce hay have 
ign 
; and the price 
drained and well farm 
sa of land in better form than the rest, ye Beng be 
re that the occupier 
to esta 
ms bet with all 
ag a thorough 
Fonar of capital, — 
have not succeeded so 
gees 
ing, firing, an 
direction, and new villa 
ges spring 
up like the are ‘a shadow for 
in one eye’—a kind of Monops who gong at 
J they 
the head’ and little more. At oe far end of the forest 
