THE GARDENERS’ 
to add that ee K the of r “rt o° Gar. 
d <r ge residing at ‘the tthe Pa piace 
ailed the mselves of this adva: a n 
beg 
E ai an 
; sle, Carmar ther n, Cardigan, and many 
ar. 
Fune gma for large Establishment £3 
second- zare Establishment . 2 
Bh 4 ts rd-rate Establishment ° A 
N.B.—Delive fre any r: sie acket in 
London, 0i “pe any ed of et paar Western Rantway' Reeser 
Epon and Bristol in aca (See Adv. Dec ee gene 
particulars by post if r ER ing, Berks, J 
The Gardeners’ Chronicle, ter 
warmth than if they w the open a 
ces 
A 
ir, because | under all crcumstancs which a 
ender nd i 
K 
1.—1815.] CHRONICLE 3 
TOME GROWN SEEDS.—In calling attention to ] entirely upon their — being well ripened, and the] its being hardy; for every garden, deton the 
] H the Collections of Seeda Advertised i m8 the. ON ax page manae pots thoroughly dra apreis should be both the and the 
Gardeners’ Chronic Elet Plants in gheaphah uses have i in all cases less need of Galias: To or ou n parts we — it tb 5 hardy, 
E pie - - the 
Chin ina Rose ll be, man 
y are 
h | just mentioned as being unharm edb 
i 
the necessarily fnn ere e The t 
y9 e of fro 
1 situation 
s that plants, like animals, can bear a “much ome 
pony eratur 
Paving “acto to that great Horti- 
proud o g 
culture Al Stine which, by a wise application of its 
re 
p 
We find a still air, when w thermometer is 10°, 
mperature of 3 
Men suffer thus 
n consequence of a los s of their animal heat ; _ but tin 
sources, has so em his country. 
R Paris Correspondent has sounded a note of 
alarm which we si te ill be heard all over the 
ae from cold wind is probably caused by.a | s of 
the haat = = a indispensable to their vitality, 
y this a f cold winds 
a pcre; that the mere lowness of 
| temperature “can accou nt “for, i is undou bte 
e see the common 
SATURDAY, JANUARY 4, 1845. 
MEETINGS FOR 
ntomological 
| mometer suspe ended in 
d of plant sustains no injury ! 
country. e announces th nE apk of certain in- 
genious Frenchmen "who intend to fave r John 
Ryall 3 
Bull with some p s none 
but a Gascon would have the hantihood 4 to prey 
Let them 
If after this notice, and our caution, people ar 
found to spend wA wa e frane with such people, they 
must nets cry 0 f they are cheated, and if the 
hone 
of foreign chaniata 
fot nn er days w we saw much | of th 
lish 
= 
Wepnzspay Jan.15 Microscopical 
“Our scarlet Pelargoniums and other plants 
oughly drained yr a T ge pnt nouse are 
Sues ness from cold, to yid textent, by that | 
e cautioned — against them 
| bana of our succe ‘On the 
circumstance cea lone, and ee ne nt rier e air about 
plai 
again st walls,” oe an excellent practical gardener 
in the south of Eng “ have sustained little or no 
g we have had the the ermome ter at 
| 
them still fi er to dis 
assistance of a M i 
e grew for three wint 
Rha a flabelliformis and 
But t 
e bott tom is 
without protection. 
an ons 
2 
r daily experience shows us that all things 
Ee are wet freeze soone r than such as are dry: it 
| dulcis, a species 0 
| aid of shelter. 
e plants, an 
ions an instance ô A where, i 
f Delhi, 
gi fp in health the Xanthochs grus 
a most delicate family, by the 
“ To show effects of eg tine ue culture 
adduc 
the 
Xantholynu dulcis ezi be ed a a remark- 
Te neee Ni E E 
e, 1 the 
southern Satie of tadis, and which would not livéi in 
persevered 
a 
man can say that he has been cheated 
unawares. 
al - the a 
who pE i of this kind of rogue 
a i pa told that the pepo rans 
men n of tepe lability never “peter their goods about, 
oe hiri n th 
or 
tery, and u 
kyi But 
has t 
- | large tree in ‘the ae of ee King of Delbi; but 
ate of aharunpo ore, exists asa 
ving given this warning, we again say 
a the kaksi ree a en on the other side of the 
here, surroun 
| cial climate is 
it o the 
zem it arrives, i Fo nothing to operate 
in a op 
and orted to have mi 
upon, eed that tender plants, vho ost 
oS aes a wi ill spas any am nt of 
; On the contra 
Channel, Pray c and to our correspondents, 
Give us notice of. thelr arrival. 
~“ 1 L A AR BOT ANY. 
Gotp-risH.— ‘Alas, for my 
S co ould, be e content to see then die, 
tiful par fish! ! 
aes miserably ost distressing. Is there 
| but to peris vee 
over i its S 
well as as its fruit protected feck e v ya praa 
. eve cies has ye own 
special degree of ten Bates ess, 
ry. sp 
ha re nothing has yet | 
ragga an changing ; shi Bina tata is a delu- 
of soldiers.” 
g 
e more Hake 
Relies, 
s 
ana plants are the reverse 
like sickly animals, are always impa- 
ember the surprise that some years 
Ty horticulturists near London, gia 
lata a great many tend 
è | coal. 
n 
b But 
|strugeting pa their ee 
es 
t that disgusting: mataia ss which 
bodies and in a few hours 
e te- 
glass ci cistern, EY e o as to be level with the eye, and 
was i rye ossible to conceive anything | more beautiful 
duced to a few sickl y specimens, 
s, and A have Be Kope that even 
will be left a few days longi can be done 2”? 
“Thus lamenta a fair correspondent, "The best answer 
itself; for then 
may be most advan 
ae to employ, r suspect that no material will, 
hen the Mfg found better than lu aw ms char- 
ue t that experiments hay 
only when we have learned its ag sp we hope to 
ure it. 
oft and silky threads which -may sometimes be 
er plan 
me intelligent 
lants de- 
t at the same time, | 
t| might have ve expected, but 
favour, and w 
ave 
ight 
a is evidently turni 
e that 
of little grains (or tig formed in its interior, and, 
belie the adverse cD ainn 
arri ca f a fa Fori explanation. | 
. 
e have also and a more cogent r 
The “Horticultural Society received a few “months 
since 
o 
mpunity. This 
e particular 
f| to iing = a ver 
i= | Conserv: 
n 
arge expense, seeds of a bush 
island of — which he 
call ddl This plant produced 
one inte a Beg flower last November in the Society’s 
rvatory, ofa aa re lear th purple a bathe pat 
ta ite 
found by him in nl 
d 
and d 
ed pore in cust ters a: 
A 
; pant oath be 
Uy adopted : rth fact, sh is eee 
wing how much more our 
Med than they eas be be. ie ae power ofl 
Plants alluded to depended 
it is tender; but its survi 
ts | drained an 
5 
el to know tore 
ed b 
d sheltered i ae 
* On the Growth of Plants in Closely Glazed Cs 
when they escape from the parent, growing into other 
little threads. 
