562 THE GARDENERS CHRONICLE. LANs. 36; 
as other people do who have a| I had been melting pa glue, ne de 
Gardener, w which I have not, att consequently ime a r e marme glue I used is known v| tion aot these; recently given in “the i laniaprtatar aait in 
with on the manufactory a: = i and when made | have a ws 
Buta ‘neighbour w who is in the mbe e- predicament vitle) | over sss fire I applied i it to't rat iece of glass only 7| completely in the dark on this sub ject re` Govers 
respect to ‘labour, and yet hardly ever failed having an li witha small’h 10gs “hair e ae ES t gris: given oh or = least anig that we 
abundant crop, hand could bear | should have cheap glass, many individuals are now i 
touehed except w ing i he surface of the sido ‘ot “the grate. building, or abont beginning 6 build, “gr and other f 
followed his:plan, ait an trifling car. ron aeons be coe wu vila face of th m rs e min thie: firs t question: whidy 7 
have only had one failure since, and expect never to|iplaced on the'glue, and gently pr ressed w ith a arises is, whose e pian í mks to fo low in making thie: 
hav her. My friend’s beds a re several of them 12) expel any air that t may have gòt b nein the pices a rs bi border ? f ? rie afte all 
ani 16 years old. Þe ds nthe event of | filled twill arise fren: 
beginning cane the winter, aol Tet the 3 young ranners kill} its being ss, when ed with | thio Ge cheap a Hay whow will avail a 
and take the place of the old or roots, whereby aden the glue, yant a greater heat it may ave “held over t 
yer o G MAES Jon a warmiromplate. I fir ad paid fi teg It is such then that are ele in 
by th the same process. Bat $ — awfailure in 1843; 80 the ——_ of attaching the label t one-person informs: lity 
2 g just refer retto, — entesize, which I alio “used, as it that his — must — neh horses, nightsoil, ana 
peau ou really oon if E cou! uld g any apparent surface on the piba ty — 
yowaccurately, would be incredible This mies i tried but if great. care is not thing 
the agai 
at 
glue; and i n ainas andiut utterly at variance with thè wanta of 
the Vine; telling us éthab rinpa e limearubbish y char 
coal, and ‘bones: alone should constitute its food, and that 
hes: E 
th i — 3e ‘the 
being ‘that the guano uca pia nis-and‘lilabel and u upper glass. "ie has oec Soon tome pe 
very good fruit, but no more of it hee might have been) a small piece of gase—eny about à an inch or “ of an 
without any dressing, and the size thar A a hat these are all uses 7 
than my inferior mode of cultivation commsonly:1 gives. | on it, and jo vined by marin e glue to a piece of common | ful en app d ightly there ean beno doubt, either 
The bell watered with my guano was not so early by a| slate, where the label was required M ie al: d geio: when ith th il; to-effeetw 4 
week, and the plants not larger than usual:; but the:|'streugth, and inserted deep into the grou wate er, and also to enable the roots: y 
cropimquantity, size, and favour on a par with that òf |'there isno end to the meagre of this” "alte se aE to run in all part nis 4 
f weve iderably imad- | vention to articles liabl Vin eis differently: cireumstanced in our Graper' ies than 
any of my neighbours. My composition is climate In-using the marineiglues. I think | it advis £ France or Germany, and that 7 
1b. Degg óf Epsom Se ri salts, Pearl ash, and of glass, >| the produce is also wma ent, "poth as regars sizé aat 
carbonate of ae and 4 Ib. of muriate eof a ry infact, we may just as well-compare te Ges 
60 of wi I used H tities:| the state of weather. Sine sa in the manner iey gathered in our r native ro with that ae 
ofiehloride and haipo of ‘lime and nitre, ins verter ee at would answer w ova preserving labels 1 Fal tn-fields. ~~ Grapes ir 4 
pearl ash; but I tried ser twain different paris of | casks i ine-cellars i and last a long period; the tabl ‘here’ 
the beù this year and fi yaam s e: being aniihi in water; “or the | Peeing take w upa an in mpo ortant position’ ; piste 
soon’as'the plants show of growthri i the spring, | dampest situations.—J. Gre rant, Woolwich. | the Continent'they are collected and thrown’ in nto ue 4 
ing them peaty freely y without hree times, Hyd ful in the | press, as they sho e, pp ; 
atiintervals of a week, so as = finish ‘before — | culture of this, i | beg to offer the following observations | of England do in respect to Apples; they Lander 
‘into:flower. fo if the season be dry I-find i that may be fine for family use, and the rest are 
liberally ‘with | lhet- yent Iput pots, and kept crushed ‘to make cider. No analogy can be dra 
common water afterwards during their whole time of them im a Cuc a erama eak ra beginn grown, forthe purpose of m 
growth, iri Tactivity will ve kly April, when ‘es were taken out, and shifted Sut wine, in theo open n air, and‘the produce of our 
them. re of the: quantity, Strawberries me neh pots, a and then returned to the frame again, | unde er glass‘; indeed the % 
ver saw grown on plants grown sepa- til the middle of May. They No 
rately. ng oe y separately, neg bea u plan the bed i is of | ow shifted into 6-inch pots, and ao in a doctrine:as that of adiing par from forming 
d yet last: year I measured a'| emt ‘with the pots | half ‘specie ina — bottom- portio 1 of the „Vine border; indeed, " fe 
ante of Keen's aioa inches, and that towards} heat. A the tl 
dof ‘the season. And during the e whole time: of} 'to the greenhouse, wis x ‘i the pots ticultural n= me “Chiswick, are proof tha 
goonies filled ~ ; and when he had be- | necessa The Vines there, we a saaa 4 
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m time gather a- plate fi ‘oots ; 
bition. — course equal to-it, on de- |;come ‘somewhat hardened off, they were ae ong | planted iiterally i in aceordamee w ith irections gi 
count oft the siii season; but the erop was) ina.cold: ae on in ets they pass assed the n| in Mr. Hoare’s reeent work-on the Vi Are sakae diedy 
som aaia aa t sean at so isiro lig iian it February 0 of this year they were again pines; in the} might have been e aipa The great Grapëg 
rof when = ripe. —G.J. i d all the sun-light that ish some thousands of a io 
‘ardiness of the Dalilia—Me. Murray, gardener; j ae given them during ‘the summer. ‘The plants | judges in oven of this:fruit, would m 
Taymouth Cas in the gardens there early in| now measure 2 feet in i ight from ee Sea of the pot| excavate the fine loamy compost, collected ee “consider 
July, two Dahlias, (Phenomenon and Andrew Hofer,) in:| to >the flow: “i mai are respectively of the fol- able trouble from some upland pasture, and substitute 
full bloom, after having withstood the winter's cold,-in| eo | brickbats, charcoal, &c., with an idea of accomp 
open air, preserving last year’s:stems and foliage, weadth Actoas.._ Cireumferenee. r feats than the victories already t 
&e. ill not the seeds of these be of service in the Not : on ae a = po $ 2 giret by 9} inches. | their favour. Itis well: that such-an institution a8" 
Pee: : : % 9 4 : 
imatising of this jus F H £. iad i or ito prove 
4 
5 
» a s 
a ë , Beg ‘ 
to the m of the e for the last nine winters, ee ” 3 "i $ 3 2 
1838 The tw tieges st flowers were watered 12 times with 
Potter's liquid guano. The soil in which they bese yeas ihk 
grown consisted of dung, leaf-mould, an nd peat in \puzzle ei oth inventions which are so 
ai hone: | THA ii Soi adie variance with those which have stood the eee 
rience, suits them better than am anythin g else My on oy ea ae Hed th 
am acquainted. In conclusion, I may add that i Spinach ine sas — will Sari, E 
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instances ha’ Phage: 
ris 
year as promising as pence Are these facts of eng 
occurrence in such ra AEREE latitude iMag 
it is 
adduced as a proof of the re “sett of Mr, Mearns’s 
sy that he has been re-elected over the host ihe di 
3 t ie of the early sow ps, especially 
eek ay We ists dec etek Sind Coty en noe ear ane ever bart spose leaving |0 aa ei (ihe minor ee ET on dhis io ti 
3 : s 3 only the top bud, until the flowers begin to colour. B; ace- e & o. bes Oe oana 
i anghit irb eah an Fras a mere t> } following this ‘plan of eultivätion, I w i enabled to A case, that the transplanted plants Gothe eee i 
noble specimens in the greenhouse two months in the the winter anea ai aay ated. with you:some 
year.—G. Handley, Milford House, Derby. E OI E commûnie 
ra e 
ee; and t ‘ar from the claims of the oth elit 
Feie iaia of Fine Cu era a se ving (page time ago, on the cirele of s a gi ra . pase 
545) a Me Howe woodland a 
tes being sabes into a with those of Mr. 
Mr: M?s re-election was determined u 
before aieea in. x ‘ f such an aj ee hav ap reo oe 
thod o y cause of su ppeara: * 
Mie te tral he bon aeons ie eksieiets inf ln I iny ine, and reculis of my own ox, | Correspondent lately observed, setit where a zing 
al wrt stated; perience of the plan for the formation of Vine-bo orders ba ” fonine iy tine booeione primi 
Toma thet of Me. Meare himself), ihat Mr-M recommended by him. Last winter I beth bri a bed ; ae 
ined ; á ~~. | consistii id covered with fungi. 
was to be retained ; while I received a letter from the dust ; is these mi sect Wate = caer i ay rn not have been the ca 
the Journal wras piinia Laeiain aR thë and a'portion of t hie davi because w „cir a 
of elects +h pedag Vap i RO BOT cede ret TE nota Marg ii tienttby of te were very close,.and it would 
onials— A. strength of | former, I procured seven’ Vines from the “ Shirley a horse to have turned pon prag A 
i a the bord me in contact e 
Rockwork.—1 found in the “Gardeners Recei riag p i PEPEE EAA 
n= = ections for making artificial pe patie pager vioh M asin ae y M Hoare, in es, and jomed ag 
ki the ti i “set Page! e€ 
wo eee pesa es e time a ran rockwork |“ Vines, after being puree of th their ae an —AF afecbivn, Pionist 
bat 
hci pee 
by Coun try Show. 
pree of ge è ae ned 't oe would form Ere en x fred Coppice Carnation Show.— e ad 
a very good vely contrast, an was not dis- | Sth et. 
sensei coat = anly e was Ble at weakly, and instead of these a splendid shoots,” ' they took place on Friday, — er eeitad 
in eee nd not bigger he result. 
the'better. The composition stands fast, sas pees not} leaves very oh je Me one 1 i te 
appear in the least affeeted by a all the rain that ~ should mention pmi zade the materials re sA 
c 
r i 
exposed. E mention this, i m order ‘that those ae _ top spit of an exelent sem AA the turf entisely Mr: Wood; 4. 
moll 
Bor 
admirers 
: omnis ne chink it likely to prove a an indispensable orna- 
my want of sueeess J this cireumsta not 
a sore Si which is sö desira serra observed from several communications which have 
What 
4 Slowed Mie J bio directions, have succeeded no 
