492 
TH E GARDENERS’ gurniconsll mbes 
i 19, 1858. 
portion oe he is 
stay in, till the =. 
i mfined to the oeitiyation of 
“I should give a poor idea of the prospects of | 
the Cotton trade by simply section! ing the com- 
mencement and recent oper rations connected with | s 
e| Mr. 
q 
Staffordshire ; Mr. LEW 1s SoLomon, Covent 
SPENCER, Bowood, Calne, Wilts; C. 
Hi ldenley, near ’ Malton, X 
T. Tar LOR, Co vent t Garden ; 
Wib 
ork- | $ 
not endowed with pow 
san & more Pr 
g true, however 
ure » 
aah TILYARD. 
perature ge 
E 
14 
Mr. bree VEITCH, ek me) ) 
S.W.; Mr. J. B. Waite, the pentane near 
Dorking. : af 
In the 
some of our mo 
cases, peop 
1 +, 
CA on 
has been, and so I 
aper trader has 
oe to co 
considerable 
gh pt for on ‘stver, T 
ed to be idl his, 
rare pai nan of Pag hive. of | A 
a particu alee ta and the much as, 
ounce of Cotton has “been ool- 
ur performed, 
aai case, 
ted, all th 
ynd of doing it borne l an native fra cans a 
level of the sea ; and certainly among the fin 
s op ododendron 
New Plants. 
226. ES ARGENTEUM, B. M. 5053. 
A ti country 30 feet in height, a 
native ‘of Sikkim H narin on the summit of Sinchul, 
Suradah, and Tonglo, elev. -10,000 feet te a the 
asdf discoveries of Dr. Hooker 
Eve ts tlowerless i 
miners ‘of its foliage, the ing 0 
ng and broad in proportivt any silvery beneath. 
other interesting state is he earl ys spring, when 
new leaf-buds are forming; t these are long, and 
clothed with i im 
ook, as Dr. Hooker 
ond s of Pine; 
ages 
vegetable ii ee cold seaso: 
n 
i puenta of more delicate conetifelion if the 
endered more ste: at an 
oad out ter “or lower scales broad 2 and cease d 
“It ispi ay fall Poe à eigen 
sta e progress of the i of} ft 
e great 
itera o guard effectually jects 
ah inc aet of high winds, Bs the atm. 
S free admission to 
war care, and 
spel was in the be | 
a common fire in the greenhouse ty 
OET A 
o? many har 
sufico * 
o lig 
guard seas the frosty cold that might ocenr 
the nig! 
2: it as then seen that the beneficial eff 
a rensar might be carried further and = 
matter v willy a> int I believe it has God’s 
‘oe Pay it; 
t, Africa i is naturally adapted | 
pee 
ieving that the ois loblone’s coals Still 
is the fuses with its head of handsome iA 
pem e, pubescent. e t 3 
bud, ually whiten 
ning as they fags pr ree and "having 
blood 
-purple 
for growin oad is indigenous to the country ; next, 
because, wherever Cotton will grow, the pe ople | 
ery out for the African to come and help them to 
_ cultivate it, showing, ome my opinion, that he is its | 
natural cultivator 
mo in 
e trust 
they will receive sh attention they ù deserve at aes 
unding the stamens, qui ale cons ni 
rt ont’. view vot the flower. 
e kno w produced 
tion, i in a nae greenhouse of the 
March, 1858. Bot. Mag. 
o 
were, as far 
for the first time i in cultiv 
oyal Garden 
DR. CTURE ON H 
hands of Govern Some s will 
ama of nativo 
been shown, wholl psec z this stale pre- 
indien, and we should cértainl 
experience ts some negroes of the most woolly 
type t in anita dor for anen 
vile than our own boasted Cau reed |Z 
THERE is no doubt that Government is pre- | 
in 
en 
from our own |; 
f the lecture = Loe a eee to 
ave at Chiswick on of iy th 
bod: ws how 
Everybody knows tgs or yA 
influences vegetable life. E a our nieve most vegetable 
ies seem die, lo: 
the different regions o of the earth, then en, the 
n fire, and 
in would then for a long time diffuse p pat i warmth around, 
4, At last 
ARNOTT’S LE EATING. vi 
. WE have been favoured by Dr. Arnott with the 
pla 
during green elds by strong fros economical 
into a dingy brown. From such a state there tion be the great “og engine boiler used in the mines ¢ 
no revival if change did not take Ly in ae erid Cornwall, and commonly cal pn Comi boiler, J 
positions of the sun and earth, so heey e solar given quantity of fuel used in this produces much mor 
rays of light an and heat to fall gain duri ban ing do double the effect ‘obtainable from “the ë same quan 
more directly, more ony, on the 
vegetable | 
paring 
of Parliament an estimate for the much wanted 
temperature of the imate and season, a not only 
at the distant end only 
gave out heat along its course, but continued to diffuse 
heat derabl after the combustion hai 
oft ea however that such brick 
tracti expansion from frequent 
SrA and cooling, had iia produ in it throug! 
which the smo! oke or gases escai the greenhouse, - 
om a er on a 
it was seen that in lieu of the tanks or 
troughs, pipes of cast iron migh substituted, rami 
ing to every part of the building, in which heated 
water might be caused constantly to te froma 
boiler placed in any convenient situation near, This 
ni nt ees of completeness is that which 
is now becoming very common. To the different forms 
of such warming apparatus exhibited here to-day wi 
iiei proceed to give our bey ion. As a convenien 
andard with which to compar we shal 
speak of what is held to b le o 
poe superiority, although not so great, is found in many 
other comparisons, 
The Cornish boiler is of cylindrical form, like a 
great tube with rounded ends, and is placed horizon- 
conservatory at Kew. Plans are already in pre 
ena 
but the permanent kinds also are very 
diferent," 2evording both to the mean tem 
A smaller tube of equal lang, H which phe a 
with water when the boiler is in use, passes through it, 
an Sir CHARLES Barry has been consulted u perature of | open tot both ends; one of the = 
rong subject. When, our great National Garo fen the clima' rat the range which occurs Tetiresa the the inne aS kragne r - furnace, a 
hall h extremes of heat and cold during the summer and iadh of the flame and heated rea ang 
for the half-hardy plants of temperate climates as y e other end where the chime fines tegin, aD 
P pe Zi 
it has been already for those of the tropics, Kew “of the vegetable productions which have been |is thus surrounded above and below by “the water #8 
will indeed become a garden worthy of bearing the weeks d together in this garden during the present | that none its radiant heat can be hee oe 
tamnei ROY displaying to the delight of seers such endless | much of the heat of oy smoke or burned r 
eee ; ariety and beauty of form and co many cannot | absorbed into the boiler by contact, a as the roar 
m. 41 t e- benked ae Js formed 
Cok E by pe Honi re 1 reer “i been | 22 y appear tonia in any give place on the | the outer parson f the oiler in other pit the 
taken, an as will bo “seen by the notice ae iour saree of i this g globe; but human intellige nce has now | by the su porting | teiek work before it finally ete 
ecently—by which the — of this gratifying spec-| Much of f fuel effected by this boiler & 
bares et iot upon it are t, e to predn dt a i ow meet- tacle has been rendered even easy. Formerle ihe. due to ea mg of its porch been 
ing ay LA fol oe eg E ar ro A u Ny 5, at 2 bitants of t this country Weald have had to travel | exposed to irect iati heat i 
A a sa. a È ien , at great cost of time and money, | and of that which absorbs heat by contact ate ed 
"e = tau on Short Ve a - n for in their lives a hasty view of many | air currents, ini and Tn: It imp erantage 
iy A y $ ‘ort Place, W.; Avera of ot kinds of topil plants which we cme 3 now, any | note however that there is a limit to the the 
r. Henay AILEY, Nuneham Ys — at leisure, in their living perfecti seg as | derivable m mere contact of hot air, oe) 
Boun, Esq., York pen Covent Garde en, 5. W.: ts of our conservatories and hothous eparting smoke has soon given up all the othe 
i lone, of all created | can thereby be taken from it. Not a lots useless 
y ae en ty to make for himself th A shelter ee of haaraa been a nearly phat 
ouse whic e din arm by TEN a fire in it, | but costly ext of ee oke leaving 
fitted naturally onl; from the smoke. ti is evident that the smoki ke ee 
ye exist fortably anywhere any boiler must be as hot as the ] oi from its 
tion to such Helter and can afford which it has last pes The Cornish xe of the 
|e wre ty dee Or Animals of warm | great bulk is little fitted for the purl cisesto 
as he may desire to around hi dit —- A boiler for generating steam fire for 
ere iisk climate still more complete in in much water, b A ] placed over p neod 
conservatorii uses that he is able to keep heating the amg! oe eae 
growing cet near him i exten 
specii of | chiefly sive ties: to th 
In lling-house warmth is obtained od nee approach in, the heating Tog te aa 
is obtain ornish boiler is pain by wha E the allel 
HN LEE, | most simpy h bi Tantin spet in a eae E fire; or half cylinder boiler, and also by the Kio ander and 
Sete posi res iat Pog: away th the saddle boiler. _ These have a gaan fire p! is complete 
is present to watch the fire using the pate, Si bel nn m0 h prevents ts the Joss a 
Sai shia on feds Sub ad > 5 ow by suitable brickw w. so set 
i bs Tamsa Sawbridgeworth may be maintain ie SOAN Aas tae are ee in ikon sii ar vs oon oer 
i also the protection of clothing, . sf 
eater Larrea Bea, Keele ital Rewok, | mitting and fluctuating fires m may hing, such inter- | pis on the gr ter part “pers pari jeg ta serine these comp% 
The 
the Eh 
